Comparative data quality assessment for ACE SIS, ACE EPAM, WIND 3DP, SOHO/ERNE, and SOHO EPHIN during selected solar energetic particle events B. Heber.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Acceleration of Solar Energetic Particles Rami Vainio University of Helsinki, Department of Physics, Finland University of Turku, Department of Physics.
Advertisements

Pete Truscott 1, Daniel Heynderickx 2, Fan Lei 3, Athina Varotsou 4, Piers Jiggens 5 and Alain Hilgers 5 (1) Kallisto Consultancy, UK; (2) DH Consultancy,
BELGISCH INSTITUUT VOOR RUIMTE-AERONOMIE INSTITUT D’AERONOMIE SPATIALE DE BELGIQUE BELGIAN INSTITUTE FOR SPACE AERONOMY BELGISCH INSTITUUT VOOR RUIMTE-AERONOMIE.
4 Feb 2009STEREO SWG Mtg, Pasadena1 A 3 He-rich SEP Event Observed over ~80  in Solar Longitude Mark Wiedenbeck, JPL with contributions from: Glenn Mason,
M.E. Wiedenbeck, JPL/Caltech Thanks to: the ACE/ULEIS &SIS Teams and the STEREO/LET, SIT, & SEPT Teams 9 June 20101ACE/SOHO/STEREO/Wind Workshop.
Construction of a long term interplanetary He dataset in the framework of the ESA ESHIEM project D. Heynderickx, DH Consultancy, Belgium A. Varotsou, A.
The Johns Hopkins University Applied Physics Laboratory SHINE 2005, July 11-15, 2005 Transient Shocks and Associated Energetic Particle Events Observed.
SEP Data Analysis and Data Products for EMMREM Mihir I. Desai & Arik Posner Southwest Research Institute San Antonio, Texas Mihir I. Desai & Arik Posner.
On the link between the solar energetic particles and eruptive coronal phenomena On the link between the solar energetic particles and eruptive coronal.
THREE-DIMENSIONAL ANISOTROPIC TRANSPORT OF SOLAR ENERGETIC PARTICLES IN THE INNER HELIOSPHERE CRISM- 2011, Montpellier, 27 June – 1 July, Collaborators:
S. Della Torre 1,2, P. Bobik 5, G. Boella 1,3, M.J. Boschini 1,4, C. Consolandi 1, M. Gervasi 1,3, D. Grandi 1, K. Kudela 5, F. Noventa 1,3, S. Pensotti.
Influence of EMIC Waves on Radiation Belt Dynamics T. Kersten, R. B. Horne, N. P. Meredith, S. A. Glauert ESWW11 Liège, 17-21/11/2014 British Antarctic.
U N C L A S S I F I E D Operated by the Los Alamos National Security, LLC for the DOE/NNSA Pitch angle evolution of energetic electrons at geosynchronous.
4/18 6:08 UT 4/17 6:09 UT Average polar cap flux North cap South cap… South cap South enter (need to modify search so we are here) South exit SAA Kress,
SEP Acceleration Mechanisms Dennis K. Haggerty and Edmond C. Roelof Johns Hopkins U./Applied Physics Lab. ACE/SOHO/STEREO/Wind Workshop Kennebunkport,
Cross-calibration of SOHO/ERNE proton and heavy ion measurements with other particle instruments at L1 E. Valtonen, M. Paassilta, R. Vainio, O. Raukunen,
EVE non-detection of Doppler-shifted He II 304 Å H.S. Hudson 1,2, L. Fletcher 2, A. MacKinnon 2, and T. Woods 3 1 SSL, UC Berkeley, 2 University of Glasgow,
CXC EPHIN Status and Alternatives Michael Juda. CXC EPHIN StatusPage 2 Outline 1.EPHIN description 2.Thermal issues 3.+27V rail anomaly and impacts 4.Operations.
Spectrum of Accelerated Particles Derived from the MeV Line Data in Some Solar Flares Leonty I. Miroshnichenko (1, 2), Evgenia V. Troitskaia (3),
GEANT-4/Spenvis User Meeting November 2006 Solar Energetic Particle Modelling Activities at ESA A.Glover 1, E. Daly 1,A. Hilgers 1, SEPEM Consortium 2.
Practical Models of Solar Energetic Particle Transport Leon Kocharov Space Research Laboratory University of Turku, Finland Requirements.
Measuring Proton Energies and Fluxes Using EIT (SOHO) CCDs Areas Outside the Solar Disk Images L. Didkovsky 1, D. Judge 1, A. Jones 1, and J. Gurman 2.
Further investigations of the July 23, 2012 extremely rare CME: What if the rare CME was Earth-directed? C. M. Ngwira 1,2, A. Pulkkinen 2, P. Wintoft 3.
Solar Weather and Tropical Cyclone Activity Abstract Worldwide tropical cyclone energy and frequency data was obtained from the Unisys Weather database.
Solar Energetic Particle Events: An Overview Christina Cohen Caltech.
Decay Phase of Proton and Electron SEP Events E.I. Daibog 1, K. Kecskeméty 2, Yu.I. Logachev 1 1 Skobeltsyn Inst. of Nuclear Physics, Moscow State Univ.,
System for Radiation Environment characterization (fluxes, doses, dose equivalents at Earth, Moon and Mars) on hourly thru yearly time frame Example: Snapshots.
Study of Local Heliospheric Current Sheet Variations from Multi-Spacecraft Observations D. Arrazola · J.J. Blanco · J. Rodríguez-Pacheco · M.A. Hidalgo.
C. J. Joyce, 1 N. A. Schwadron, 1 L. W. Townsend, 2 R. A. Mewaldt, 3 C. M. S. Cohen, 3 T. T. von Rosenvinge, 4 A. W. Case, 5 H. E. Spence, 1 J. K. Wilson,
A.V. Belov 1, E. A. Eroshenko 1, H. Mavromichalaki 2, V.A. Oleneva 1, A. Papaioannou 2, G. Mariatos 2, V. G. Yanke 1 (1) Institute of Terrestrial Magnetism,
Solar Wind and Coronal Mass Ejections
C. J.Joyce 1, J. B. Blake 2, A. W. Case 3, M. Golightly 1, J. C. Kasper 3, J. Mazur 2, N. A. Schwadron 1, E. Semones 4, S. Smith 1, H. E. Spence 1, L.
ACE Page 1 ACE ACE PresentorInstitution. ACE Page 2 ACE Mass Fractionation in the Composition of Solar Energetic Particles Although it is well known that.
UPDATE OF THE ESP MODEL FOR SOLAR PROTON RISK ASSESSMENT* M.A. Xapsos 1, C. Stauffer 2, G.B. Gee 2, J.L. Barth 1, E.G. Stassinopoulos 1 and R.E. McGuire.
1 SEP “Campaign Events” for SHINE 2003 Question: Can we identify solar/interplanetary factors that drive SEP spectral and compositional variability at.
Earth-Moon-Mars Radiation Environment Model N. A. Schwadron, K. Kozarev, L. Townsend, M. Desai, M. A. Dayeh, F. Cucinotta, D. Hassler, H. Spence, M. Pourars,
C. J. Joyce, 1 N. A. Schwadron, 1 L. W. Townsend, 2 R. A. Mewaldt, 3 C. M. S. Cohen, 3 T. T. von Rosenvinge, 4 A. W. Case, 5 H. E. Spence, 1 J. K. Wilson,
What we can learn from the intensity-time profiles of large gradual solar energetic particle events (LGSEPEs) ? Guiming Le(1, 2,3), Yuhua Tang(3), Liang.
THREE-DIMENSIONAL ANISOTROPIC TRANSPORT SIMULATIONS: A PARAMETER STUDY FOR THE INTERPRETATION OF MULTI-SPACECRAFT SOLAR ENERGETIC PARTICLE OBSERVATIONS.
16-20 Oct 2005SSPVSE Conference1 Galactic Cosmic Ray Composition, Spectra, and Time Variations Mark E. Wiedenbeck Jet Propulsion Laboratory, California.
SEP Event Onsets: Far Backside Solar Sources and the East-West Hemispheric Asymmetry S. W. Kahler AFRL Space Vehicles Directorate, Kirtland AFB, New Mexico,
Multi-spacecraft observations of solar energetic electron events during the rising phase of solar cycle 24 W. Droege 1, R. Gomez-Herrero 2, J. Kartavykh.
TRAD, Tests & Radiations ESWW11-session 5, November 18, 2014 Processing of the ACE/SIS heavy ion data in the frame of the ESA ESHIEM project Athina Varotsou.
SEPT/STEREO Observations of Upstream Particle Events: Almost Monoenergetic Ion Beams A. Klassen, R. Gomez-Herrero, R. Mueller-Mellin and SEPT Team, G.
1 SEP Timing Studies: An Excruciatingly Brief Review Allan J. Tylka US Naval Research Laboratory, Washington DC SHINE 2006 Where was the CME when the SEPs.
Solar energetic particle simulations in SEPServer How to deal with scale separation of thirteen orders of magnitude R. Vainio, A. Afanasiev, J. Pomoell.
1 Test Particle Simulations of Solar Energetic Particle Propagation for Space Weather Mike Marsh, S. Dalla, J. Kelly & T. Laitinen University of Central.
Probabilistic Solar Energetic Particle Models James H. Adams, Jr.1, William F. Dietrich 2 and Michael.A.Xapsos 3 1 NASA Marshall Space Flight Center 2.
Interplanetary proton and electron enhancements associated with radio-loud and radio-quiet CME-driven shocks P. Mäkelä 1,2, N. Gopalswamy 2, H. Xie 1,2,
CAA 6 th Cross Cal Meeting RAL, th Oct 2007 RAPID/IES Calibration Status J.A. Davies.
Spacecast Richard B Horne, S. A. Glauert, N. P. Meredith, D. Boscher, V. Maget, A. Sicard, D. Heynderickx and D. Pitchford Forecasting the High Energy.
Contact: Dr. Johannes Labrenz Extraterrestrische Physik Institut für Experimentelle und Angewandte Physik Christian Albrechts-Universität.
EGU General Assembly 2016 Contact: Dr. Johannes Labrenz
Energetic Radiation Impacts on Space Weathering: Mercury – Mars
EGU General Assembly 2016 Contact: Dr. Johannes Labrenz
Pulkkinen, A., M. Kuznetsova, Y. Zheng, L. Mays and A. Wold
A joint study of the University of Göttingen (1) and Astrium (2)
Scientists demonstrate a new Solar Energetic Particle warning technique using K-COR ground coronagraph data A Heliophysics science publication using ESA/NASA.
George C. Ho1, David Lario1, Robert B. Decker1, Mihir I. Desai2,
EGU General Assembly 2016 Contact: Dr. Johannes Labrenz
Earth-Moon-Mars Radiation Environment Model
R. Bucˇık , K. Kudela and S. N. Kuznetsov
Karl-Ludwig Klein & Rositsa Miteva
Galactic Cosmic Ray Propagation in the 3D Heliosphere
Ulysses COSPIN High Energy Telescope observations of cosmic ray and solar energetic particles intensities since its distant Jupiter flyby in 2004 R.B.
. Multipoint, galactic cosmic ray observations associated with a series of interplanetary coronal mass ejections: the case study of June 2015 A. Papaioannou1,
LIP Lisbon We would sugest to include in the Statement of Work the following points: The development of an engineering tool to extrapolate measured solar.
Solar Energetic Electrons and Radio Emission Signatures
Max-Planck-Institut für extraterrestrische Physik
ACE/EPAM (ELECTRON, PROTON, AND APLPHA MONITOR) INTERCALIBRATION WITH STEREO/SEPT SEP EVENT OBSERVATIONS Olga Malandraki Institute of Astronomy and Astrophysics,
Presentation transcript:

Comparative data quality assessment for ACE SIS, ACE EPAM, WIND 3DP, SOHO/ERNE, and SOHO EPHIN during selected solar energetic particle events B. Heber 1, N. Dresing 1, P. Kühl 1, R. Gomez-Herrero 2, O. Malandraki 3, A. Papaioannou 3, P. Marhavilas 4, E. Valtonen 5, O. Raukunen 5, V. Riihonen 5, and D. Heynderickx 6 Abstract: Significant developments in our understanding of energetic particles in the heliosphere are based on both theoretical understanding and observational evidence especially due to more-detailed near-Earth observations. Thus, in anticipation of this network of spacecraft near Earth close to the Langragian point L1, it is a perfect time to develop techniques and strategies for combining the different energetic particle measurements. Different instrumentation measure the energy spectra and pitch angle distribution of ions from a few tenth of keV/nucleon to several hundred of MeV/nucleon as well as electrons in the range from below 20 keV to above 10 MeV. Among other SEPServer was an EU funded project that provides data and a data comparison of ACE SIS, ACE EPAM, WIND 3DP, SOHO/ERNE, SOHO EPHIN and partially STEREO SEPT. The Comparisons were undertaken for selected sample of events. In some cases not only the intensity time profiles but higher order data products such as energy spectra or pitch angle distributions of different instruments were investigated. The results for the November 1997, May 1999, November 2004, July, 2005, January 2007 and May 2007 events will be presented. 1 Christian-Albrechts-Universität zu Kiel, Germany, 2 Universidad de Alcalá, Departamento de Física y Matemáticas, Spain, 3 IAASARS, National Observatory of Athens, Greece, 4 Democritus University of Thrace, Greece 5 University of Turku, Finnland, 6 DH Consultancy, Belgium Acknowledgements: The SEPServer consortium gratefully acknowledges the financial support of the European Union through its Seventh Framework Program (FP7-SPACE), Grant Agreement # The consortium is also grateful to the PIs providing their data to the project. Introduction SEPServer ( is a collaborative project of eleven European partners funded by the European Union’s Seventh Framework Programme. The project was launched in December 2010 and was running for three years. The main objective of the project is to develop an Internet server facilitating access to solar energetic particle (SEP) data and related electromagnetic observations and to browsing tools and state-of-the-art analysis methods. The database contains SEP observations from a number of spacecraft at L1 and from HELIOS, Ulysses and STEREO. The project has performed an analysis of the SEP events observed by several spacecraft and provide these results to the community in form of event catalogs (Vainio et al, 2013, Papaioannou et al., 2014). Comparisons of the data delivered to SEPServer are undertaken for selected sample of events. In some cases not only the intensity time profiles but higher order data products such as energy spectra or pitch angle distributions of different instruments are compared with each other. Of special interest to the project are the data sets close to Earth and at a distance of about 1 AU. References: 1.Papaioannou, A. et al., SEPServer STEREO Catalogues of Solar Energetic Particle Events at 1 AU based on STEREO recordings: , Astron. Astrophys., 569, A96, doi: / / Vainio, R. et al., The first SEPServer event catalogue ~68-MeV solar proton events observed at 1 AU in Journal of Space Weather and Space Climate, 3, p.12. Instrumentation Results Proton and helium observations in four solar energetic particle events by various instruments close to 1 AU were compared. The selection included different sizes of events. Intensity-time profiles of protons for WIND/3DP, ACE/EPAM, SOHO/EPHIN and SOHO/ERNE were presented to demonstrate that all four instruments were able to record the events. The energy spectra of protons from ACE/EPAM, SOHO/EPHIN and SOHO/ERNE covered an energy range of more than three orders of magnitude (  70 keV - >100 MeV), while the energy spectra of helium from ACE/SIS, SOHO/EPHIN and SOHO/ERNE extended over roughly two orders of magnitude (  1 MeV/nucleon – 100 MeV/nucleon). In all cases the agreement between different instruments was reasonably good taking into account the slightly different locations of the spacecraft. However, a rapid fall of the proton and helium spectra measured by SOHO/ERNE was observed at the highest energies ( ≳ 80 MeV/nucleon), which cannot be readily explained. Electron measurements of ACE/EPAM and WIND/3DP were compared for the SEP event of February 18, The agreement of the electron energy spectra of WIND/3DP and ACE/EPAM was found to be very good. Poster id The following events were selected for the comparision between ACE SIS, ACE EPAM, WIND 3DP, SOHO/ERNE (see talk by Valtonen et al.), and SOHO EPHIN: 1.13 November 1997, event number 4 of the SOHO/ERNE event list May 1999, event number 17 of the SOHO/ERNE event list November 2004, event number 96 of the SOHO/ERNE event list July, 2005, event number 105 of the SOHO/ERNE event list. Time profiles and the energy spectra of protons and alpha-particles for the July 13, 2005 event measured by SOHO/ERNE, SOHO/EPHIN ACE/SIS and ACE/EPAM The agreement for protons and alpha particles is very good over the entire common energy range of the instruments. The February 18, 2000 event (electrons) dE/dx-E: SIS, EPHIN, ERNE Magnet-Foil system: 3DP, EPAM July 13/14, 2005 solar energetic particle event The comparison of the electrons are derived by