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Space Radiation and Plasma Effects on Satellites and Aviation: Quantities and Metrics for Tracking Performance of Space Weather Environment Models
- Source :
- Space weather : the international journal of research & applications, vol 17, iss 10, Space Weather
- Publication Year :
- 2019
- Publisher :
- eScholarship, University of California, 2019.
-
Abstract
- The Community Coordinated Modeling Center has been leading community‐wide space science and space weather model validation projects for many years. These efforts have been broadened and extended via the newly launched International Forum for Space Weather Modeling Capabilities Assessment (https://ccmc.gsfc.nasa.gov/assessment/). Its objective is to track space weather models' progress and performance over time, a capability that is critically needed in space weather operations and different user communities in general. The Space Radiation and Plasma Effects Working Team of the aforementioned International Forum works on one of the many focused evaluation topics and deals with five different subtopics (https://ccmc.gsfc.nasa.gov/assessment/topics/radiation-all.php) and varieties of particle populations: Surface Charging from tens of eV to 50‐keV electrons and internal charging due to energetic electrons from hundreds keV to several MeVs. Single‐event effects from solar energetic particles and galactic cosmic rays (several MeV to TeV), total dose due to accumulation of doses from electrons (>100 keV) and protons (>1 MeV) in a broad energy range, and radiation effects from solar energetic particles and galactic cosmic rays at aviation altitudes. A unique aspect of the Space Radiation and Plasma Effects focus area is that it bridges the space environments, engineering, and user communities. The intent of the paper is to provide an overview of the current status and to suggest a guide for how to best validate space environment models for operational/engineering use, which includes selection of essential space environment and effect quantities and appropriate metrics.<br />Key Points Providing an overview of the current status and proposing a guide for how to best validate space environment models for operational useTwo types of physical quantities for both science and engineering purposes have been identifiedProper metrics are needed for evaluating space environment models for different application purposes
- Subjects :
- space weather environment models
Atmospheric Science
Informatics
space weather
010504 meteorology & atmospheric sciences
single-event effects
Cosmic ray
Review Article
Radiation
Space weather
Tracking (particle physics)
Space (mathematics)
01 natural sciences
space weather model validation projects
Strahlenbiologie
radiation effects at aviation altitudes
0103 physical sciences
Magnetospheric Physics
Aerospace engineering
Monitoring, Forecasting, Prediction
Space Radiation Environment
Impacts on Technological Systems
010303 astronomy & astrophysics
0105 earth and related environmental sciences
validation and metrics
Solar energetic particles
business.industry
single‐event effects
Policy Sciences
space radiation and plasma effects on space assets
Policy
surface and internal charging
Environmental science
Space Science
business
Space Weather Capabilities Assessment
Natural Hazards
Astronomical and Space Sciences
Forecasting
Space environment
Subjects
Details
- Database :
- OpenAIRE
- Journal :
- Space weather : the international journal of research & applications, vol 17, iss 10, Space Weather
- Accession number :
- edsair.doi.dedup.....ba36f73a3d74abce4364afde99b697bc