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Introduction to Space Weather An Overview Jan. 26, 2012 Jie Zhang Copyright © CSI 662 / PHYS 660 Fall, 2009 On the News http://www.cnn.com/video/#/video/weather/2012/01/25/n r-jeras-northern-lights-over-sweden.cnn http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=cZQ6nvXl8oA What is Space Weather? "Space weather describes the conditions in space that affect Earth and its technological systems. Our space weather is a consequence of the behavior of the sun, the nature of Earth's magnetic field, and our location in the solar system” ----National Academy of Science, 1997 Where are we? We are located about half way from the center of the Milky Way Galaxy 28,000 light years from the center One of ~200 billion stars in our Galaxy The Sun as a star •An ordinary main sequence star •5 billion years old •And 5 more billion years to go •A gas ball emitting mainly visible light The Sun in interstellar space Solar wind creates a big teardropshaped heliosphere around the solar system, by interacting with the interstellar wind The Earth in the Solar System The Earth 3rd planet from the Sun 1 AU = 150 million km Travel time: By light -8 minutes By Solar Wind- ~ 72 hrs or 3 days Terrestrial Weather Terrestrial Weather By Land, Ocean and Atmosphere Sun light sustains life Climate Seasonal changes Day-to-day Weather Space Weather Storms in space directly driven by the Sun’s activity Space Weather: the Systems Space Weather: the Process It starts from a solar eruption Space Weather: effects Aurora, a nice effect From Space Space Weather: effects An adverse effect Power failure due to March 1989 storm Damaged transformer Space Weather: effects On Human Space Exploration On crew and passengers of polar-route airplanes Space Weather: effects On Satellite Operation Space Weather: effects On Communication and Navigation Space Weather: Components Planet Sun Heliosphere Magnetosphere Ionosphere Upper Atmosphere Sun: activity --- the driver Planet Flare Sun: activity --- the driver Planet Sun: where energy from? Planet Energy stored and released in magnetic field Sun: where energy from? Planet Magnetic field generated by solar dynamo, which has 11-year solar cycle Solar Cycle Sun: where energy from? Planet http://spaceweather.gmu.edu/events/hmi_emergence/ Heliosphere: solar wind Planet Spiral solar wind magnetic field: radial motion of solar wind combined with Sun’s rotation Sprinkler Analogy STEREO/SECCHI H1I STEREO A/B SECCHI Simulation (Credit: Odstrcil) On Satellite Operation Magnetosphere Planet A cometshaped region around the Earth Space Weather: solar wind Solar Wind blows the magnetosphere Magnetosphere Planet Electric Currents in Magnetosphere Magnetosphere Planet Energetic particles in Van Allen radiation belt Ionosphere Planet Density fluctuation affects radio wave reflection and transmission Neutral Upper Atmosphere Planet It is coupled with ionosphere Heliophysics Missions Solar Terrestrial Missions Credit: George Withbroe (2003) Operational Developmental Under Study Voyager I & II 77 Ulysses 90 SAMPEX 92 Geotail 92 WIND 94 SOHO 95 Polar 96 FAST 96 ACE 97 TRACE 98 ACRIMSAT 99 IMAGE 00 Cluster 00 CORONAS-F 01 GENESIS 01 TIMED 01 RHESSI 02 Double Star 03,04 THEMIS 07 SORCE 03 CINDI/CNOFS 04 TWINS 04,05 COSMIC 05 STEREO 05 SST 05 AIM 06 EPOP 06 Interhelioprobe 07-08 SWARM 09 RESONANCE ? SENTINELS 12-14 Solar Probe 12-14 CORONAS- PHOTON 06 Solar-B 06 Picard 06-07 SDO 07 Iono-Thermosphere Storm Probes 08 MMS 09 GEC 09 Radiation Belt Storm Probes 10 Solar Orbiter 11 MC/DRACO 12 Geospace Heliospheric Solar Heliophysics Missions (2012) Solar Terrestrial Missions Past ISEE 78 Ulysses 90 Yohkoh 91 SAMPEX 92 Spartan-201 94 FAST 96 Polar 96 Equator-S 97 SNOE 98 TRACE 98 IMAGE 00 IMP-8 00 ST5 06 Operational Voyager I & II 77 Geotail 92 WIND 94 SOHO 95 ACE 97 Cluster 00 TIMED 01 RHESSI 02 Developmental BARREL IRIS 12 RBSP 12 Space Environment Testbeds 12 MMS 14 Under Study Solar Orbiter Solar Probe Plus Hinode 06 STEREO 06 AIM 07 THEMIS 07 IBEX 08 CINDI/CNOFS 08 TWINS A&B 08 SDO 10 Geospace Heliospheric http://science.nasa.gov/heliophysics/missions/ Solar Theory and Modeling Plasma Physics Magnetohydrodynamics Electrodynamics Particle Physics Radiation Transfer Chemistry Space Weather Program at GMU • Strategy: a system approach to address the integrated Sun-Earth connected system • Initiated in 2003 • Space Weather Lab formed in Oct. 2006 • Faculty – – – – – – – – Dr. Ken Dere (Sun) Dr. Art Poland (Sun) Dr. Jie Zhang (Sun, Heliosphere) Dr. Dusan Odstrcil (Heliosphere) Dr. Bob Weigel (Heliosphere, Magnetosphere) Dr. Dieter Bilitza (Ionosphere) Dr. Phil Richards (Ionosphere) Dr. Bob Meier (Ionosphere and Upper Atmosphere) The End