Predicting the Probability of Geospace Events Based on Observations of Solar Active-Region Free Magnetic Energy Dusan Odstrcil1,2 and David Falconer3,4.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Heliospheric Propagation of ICMEs: The Drag-Based Model B. Vršnak 1, T. Žic 1, M. Dumbović 1, J. Čalogović 1, A. Veronig 2, M. Temmer 2, C. Moestl 2, T.
Advertisements

Forbush Decrease Prediction Based on Remote Solar Observations M. Dumbović, B. Vršnak Hvar Observatory, Faculty of Geodesy, University of Zagreb, Croatia.
On the Space Weather Response of Coronal Mass Ejections and Their Sheath Regions Emilia Kilpua Department of Physics, University of Helsinki
ICMEs and Magnetic Clouds Session Summary Charlie Farrugia and Lan Jian.
Valbona Kunkel June 18, 2013 Hvar, Croatia NEW THEORITICAL WORK ON FLUX ROPE MODEL AND PROPERTIES OF MAGNETIC FIELD.
Solar Erupting Filaments and Magnetic Field Configurations of IP Magnetic Clouds Yuming Wang 1, 2 & Jie Zhang 1 (Presenting) 1 George Mason University.
Interaction of coronal mass ejections with large-scale structures N. Gopalswamy, S. Yashiro, H. Xie, S. Akiyama, and P. Mäkelä IHY – ISWI Regional meeting.
Reviewing the Summer School Solar Labs Nicholas Gross.
1 Diagnostics of Solar Wind Processes Using the Total Perpendicular Pressure Lan Jian, C. T. Russell, and J. T. Gosling How does the magnetic structure.
STEREO AND SPACE WEATHER Variable conditions in space that can have adverse effects on human life and society Space Weather: Variable conditions in space.
Heliospheric MHD Models (for the LWS Community) LWS Workshop, Boulder, CO, March 23-26, 2004 Dusan Odstrcil 1,2 and Vic Pizzo 2 1 University of Colorado/CIRES,
Heliospheric MHD Modeling of the May 12, 1997 Event MURI Meeting, UCB/SSL, Berkeley, CA, March 1-3, 2004 Dusan Odstrcil University of Colorado/CIRES &
Forecasting Super CME Disturbances 1.Super CMEs, such as the 2000 July 14, 2003 October 28, 2003 October 29, and 2006 December 13 full halo CMEs, generate.
My 20 Years of Service at Stanford Solar Physics Group I. Improvement of inner boundary condition for data-based coronal models (WSO, MDI, HMI). II. Development.
Tucson MURI SEP Workshop March 2003 Janet Luhmann and the Solar CISM Modeling Team Solar and Interplanetary Modeling.
Prediction of Central Axis Direction of Magnetic Clouds Xuepu Zhao and Yang Liu Stanford University The West Pacific Geophysics Meeting, Beijing, China.
Relationship Between Magnetic Clouds and Earth-Directed CMEs: Space Weather Research in Stanford Solar Group Xuepu Zhao The Second International Space.
Progenitors to Geoeffective Coronal Mass Ejections: Filaments and Sigmoids David McKenzie, Robert Leamon Karen Wilson, Zhona Tang, Anthony Running Wolf.
C. May 12, 1997 Interplanetary Event. Ambient Solar Wind Models SAIC 3-D MHD steady state coronal model based on photospheric field maps CU/CIRES-NOAA/SEC.
AR 10759/ May Event Overview
When will disruptive CMEs impact Earth? Coronagraph observations alone aren’t enough to make the forecast for the most geoeffective halo CMEs. In 2002,
Identifying Interplanetary Shock Parameters in Heliospheric MHD Simulation Results S. A. Ledvina 1, D. Odstrcil 2 and J. G. Luhmann 1 1.Space Sciences.
Space Weather Forecast With HMI Magnetograms: Proposed data products Yang Liu, J. T. Hoeksema, and HMI Team.
C. May 12, 1997 Interplanetary Event. May 12, 1997 Interplanetary Coronal Mass Ejection Event CU/CIRES, NOAA/SEC, SAIC, Stanford Tatranska Lomnica, Slovakia,
Coronal and Heliospheric Modeling of the May 12, 1997 MURI Event MURI Project Review, NASA/GSFC, MD, August 5-6, 2003 Dusan Odstrcil University of Colorado/CIRES.
The “cone model” was originally developed by Zhao et al. ~10 (?) years ago in order to interpret the times of arrival of ICME ejecta following SOHO LASCO.
NADIR – Focus Area V: Forecasting Geomagnetic Activity MURI All-Hands Meeting, Boulder, CO, October, 21-22, 2008 David FalconerUniversity of Alabama &
Solar Source and Magnetic Cloud Yang Liu – Stanford University
Magnetic Structures of Active Regions and their Link to Coronal Mass Ejections Vasyl Yurchyshyn, Big Bear Solar Observatory, Big Bear City, CA 92314,
Physics of the relationship of ICMEs to their CME progenitors (Wed AM) Two major efforts are under way to address the structure of CMEs that hit the Earth,
RT Modelling of CMEs Using WSA- ENLIL Cone Model
Numerical simulations are used to explore the interaction between solar coronal mass ejections (CMEs) and the structured, ambient global solar wind flow.
Locating the solar source of 13 April 2006 Magnetic Cloud K. Steed 1, C. J. Owen 1, L. K. Harra 1, L. M. Green 1, S. Dasso 2, A. P. Walsh 1, P. Démoulin.
Arrival time of halo coronal mass ejections In the vicinity of the Earth G. Michalek, N. Gopalswamy, A. Lara, and P.K. Manoharan A&A 423, (2004)
SUB-GROUP 1: Surface Solar Magnetic Fields  The central question: Can we infer the orientation of Bz of an ICME at 1 AU by focusing on the study of the.
Forecast of Geomagnetic Storm based on CME and IP condition R.-S. Kim 1, K.-S. Cho 2, Y.-J. Moon 3, Yu Yi 1, K.-H. Kim 3 1 Chungnam National University.
Radial Evolution of Major Solar Wind Structures Lan K. Jian Thanks to: C.T. Russell, J.G. Luhmann, R.M. Skoug Dept. of Earth and Space Sciences Institute.
Synoptic Network Workshop (HAO/NCAR, April 2013) Space Weather and Synoptic Observations V J Pizzo – NOAA/SWPC.
Coronal and Interplanetary Magnetic Fields in October-November 2003 and November CMEs Vasyl Yurchyshyn Big Bear Solar Observatory,
CME Propagation CSI 769 / ASTR 769 Lect. 11, April 10 Spring 2008.
Modeling 3-D Solar Wind Structure Lecture 13. Why is a Heliospheric Model Needed? Space weather forecasts require us to know the solar wind that is interacting.
Heliospheric Simulations of the SHINE Campaign Events SHINE Workshop, Big Sky, MT, June 27 – July 2, 2004 Dusan Odstrcil 1,2 1 University of Colorado/CIRES,
Observations –Morphology –Quantitative properties Underlying Physics –Aly-Sturrock limit Present Theories/Models Coronal Mass Ejections (CME) S. K. Antiochos,
17 th November, 2005STEREO/Solar-B Workshop 1 Related Solar Imaging and Near-Earth In-situ Observations of an ICME A. N. Fazakerley 1, L.K. Harra 1, J.L.
State of NOAA-SEC/CIRES STEREO Heliospheric Models STEREO SWG Meeting, NOAA/SEC, Boulder, CO, March 22, 2004 Dusan Odstrcil University of Colorado/CIRES.
Identification of Prominence Material in Magnetic Cloud Shuo Yao China University of Geosciences (Beijing) Co-authers: E. Marsch 2,
1 Pruning of Ensemble CME modeling using Interplanetary Scintillation and Heliospheric Imager Observations A. Taktakishvili, M. L. Mays, L. Rastaetter,
30 April 2009 Space Weather Workshop 2009 The Challenge of Predicting the Ionosphere: Recent results from CISM. W. Jeffrey Hughes Center for Integrated.
Manuela Temmer Institute of Physics, University of Graz, Austria Tutorial: Coronal holes and space weather consequences.
Detecting, forecasting and modeling of the 2002/04/17 halo CME Heliophysics Summer School 1.
CME-driven Shocks in White Light Observations Verónica Ontiveros National University of Mexico, MEXICO George Mason University,USA Angelos Vourlidas Naval.
Driving 3D-MHD codes Using the UCSD Tomography
Y. C.-M. Liu, M. Opher, O. Cohen P.C.Liewer and T.I.Gombosi
Introduction to Space Weather Interplanetary Transients
D. Odstrcil1,2, V.J. Pizzo2, C.N. Arge3, B.V.Jackson4, P.P. Hick4
Miho Janvier (IAS) & Ben Lynch (UCB)
A New Methodology to Predict the Axial ICME Magnetic Field at 1 AU
Consequences of the Anomalous Expansion of CMEs in Solar Cycle 24
Introduction to “Standard” Flux-Rope Fitting
Orientations of Halo CMEs and Magnetic Clouds
Orientations of Halo CMEs and Magnetic Clouds
Solar Wind Transients and SEPs
Forecasting the arrival time of the CME’s shock at the Earth
Modeling Coronal Mass Ejections with EUHFORIA
Introduction to Space Weather
Phillip Hess Jie Zhang, Dusan Odstrcil
P. Stauning: The Polar Cap (PC) Index for Space Weather Forecasts
Correlation between halo coronal mass ejections
The Second International Space Weather Symposium
SIDC Space Weather Briefing
Presentation transcript:

Predicting the Probability of Geospace Events Based on Observations of Solar Active-Region Free Magnetic Energy Dusan Odstrcil1,2 and David Falconer3,4 1George Mason University, Fairfax, VA, 2NASA/GSFC, Greenbelt, MD 3University of Alabama, Huntsville, AL, 4NASA/MSFC, Huntsville, AL MURI/NADIR Workshop Boulder, CO October 25-26, 2011

Lead Times in Forecasting Observation of heliospheric disturbances at L1 Lead time: ~30-50 min Observation of coronal eruptions Lead time: ~1-3 days Observation of solar active regions Lead time: ~3-5 days

Photospheric Magnetic Field CME Probabilistic Model 2006-12-09 2006-12-10 2006-12-11 2006-12-12 2006-12-13 2006-12-09 CAR=E26S10 PCME = 16% RCME = 470 VCME = slow 2006-12-10 CAR=E13S10 PCME = 15% RCME = 490 VCME = slow 2006-12-11 CAR=E00S10 PCME = 13% RCME = 510 VCME = slow 2006-12-12 CAR=W13S10 PCME = 17% RCME = 520 VCME = slow 2006-12-13 CAR=W26S10 PCME = 15% RCME = 500 VCME = slow

CME Probabilistic Model CME Initial Parameters 2006-12-09 CAR=E40S10 PCME = 16% RCME = 470 Run 1 V=1000 km/s R = 200 Run 2 V=1000 km/s R = 400 Run 3 V=1000 km/s R = 600 Run 4 V=1500 km/s R = 200 Run 5 V=1500 km/s R = 400 Run 6 V=1500 km/s R = 600 Run 7 V=2000 km/s R = 200 Run 8 V=2000 km/s R = 400 Run 9 V=2000 km/s R = 600

CME Initial Parameters ICME Propagation

ICME Propagation Ensemble Study RUN 1: V = 1000 km/s, R = 200 RUN 2: V = 1000 km/s, R = 400 RUN 3: V = 1000 km/s, R = 600 RUN 4: V = 1500 km/s, R = 200 RUN 5: V = 1500 km/s, R = 400 RUN 6: V = 1500 km/s, R = 600 RUN 7: V = 2000 km/s, R = 200 RUN 8: V = 2000 km/s, R = 400 RUN 9: V = 2000 km/s, R = 600

“External” Bz Periods – Shock Compression Shock to north, positive IMF: + Shock to north, negative IMF: - Shock to south, positive IMF: - Shock to south, negative IMF: +

“External” Bz Periods – ICME Draping Above ICME center, positive IMF: - + Above ICME center, negative IMF: + - Below ICME center, positive IMF: + - Below ICME center, negative IMF: - +

Flux-Rope-Like Structure – Hydrodynamic

Flux-Rope-Like Structure – With 2D Magnetic Field

Configuration of Magnetic Flux-Ropes (Bothmer and Schwenn, 1998) Magnetic cloud properties can be related to observed filament structure

Flux-Rope at Earth Magnetic flux rope is described by analytic force-free (Lundquist) model. Temporal profiles within the traced ejecta are replaced by that solution.

Configuration of Magnetic Flux-Ropes (Yurchyshyn, 2006) For about 60% of events the halo elongations and the MC orientation correspond the local tilt of the HCS For majority of solar ejecta (80%), the underlying erupting flux rope at 1 AU aligns itself with the HCS

2005-05-13 Halo CME Event

AR 10759 – Magnetic Eruption Probability

AR 10759 – Maximum CME Speed and Width

CME Initial Parameters ICME Propagation

CME Initial Parameters ICME Propagation

Prediction of the Probability of the Bz Event Shock strength varies slightly in time due to its large angular extension Bz impact is narrower and it is stronger at the flux-rope axis

Conclusions Predicting CME impact before magnetic eruption happens (increasing lead time from 1-3 days to 3-5 days) is challenging, crude estimations might be possible, mostly for all-clear conditions. “Cone” model is a hydrodynamic ejecta and cannot predict Bz events. Inclusion of analytic profiles is the way for event-by-event predictions. Inclusion of analytic profiles of the magnetic structure helps to narrow the spatial extent of the strongest impact. More work is needed to calibrate empirical and statistical relationships on onset time, speed, and width. More work is needed to develop the “hybrid” modeling of Bz events at Earth and calibrate the flux-rope parameters especially at flanks.