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SWPC Products and Services Overview. Bob Rutledge NOAA Space Weather Prediction Center Boulder, Colorado January 22 nd , 2012. AMS Space Weather Short Course – New Orleans, LA. Outline. SWPC Overview Key Observations and Measurements NOAA Space Weather Scales
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SWPC Products and Services Overview Bob Rutledge NOAA Space Weather Prediction Center Boulder, Colorado January 22nd, 2012 AMS Space Weather Short Course – New Orleans, LA
Outline • SWPC Overview • Key Observations and Measurements • NOAA Space Weather Scales • Solar Flares (R Scale) • Radiation Storms (S Scale) • Geomagnetic Storms (G Scale) • Sequence of Events • Products and Services • Information Dissemination Methods • Near-term Changes
SWPC Overview • Space Weather Forecast Office – Operational Functions: Analysis, prediction, product issuance, customer and media interactions • Development and Transition Section – Development and support of operational applications including data, models, and higher level products • Applied Research and Space Weather Prediction Testbed – Evaluation of methods, models, technologies; applied research; support for model transition to operations • Office of the Director: Center operations and stakeholder interactions • Technical Support Branch: IT, infrastructure, 24/7 system support
Key Observations & Measurements • NOAA Operational Measurements - GOES: • Solar Imagery (SXI) • Whole-disk X-ray output (XRS) • Geosynchronous magnetic field and particle measurements (LEO from POES) • USAF Observations and Measurements: • Optical: Spot reports and flare report • Radio: Radio bursts and sweeps • External Agency Partnerships: • NASA: ACE, STEREO, SDO, etc. • ESA/NASA: SOHO – Imagery and coronograph • United States Geological Survey: Geomagnetic observatories • National Solar Observatory: Global Oscillation Network Group (GONG) • Ground-based solar observatories, GPS measurements, and the list goes on…
NOAA Space Weather Scales Radiation Storms Geomagnetic Storms http://www.swpc.noaa.gov/NOAAscales/ Radio Blackouts
Sequence of Events Conditions are Favorable for Activity (Probabilistic Forecasts) Event Occurs Coronal Observations
Sequence of Events Event Onset/ Ground-Based Observation Analysis and Prediction ACE Observation
Event-Driven Product Definitions • Watches; The conditions are favorable for occurrence • Warnings; disturbances that are imminent, expected in the near future with high probability • Alerts; observed conditions meeting or exceeding thresholds
Solar Flares (Radio Blackouts – R Scale) • Arrival: 8 minutes, photons • Duration: Minutes to 3 hours • Daylight-side impacts • Probabilistic 1, 2, 3-day forecasts • Alerts for exceeding R2 (only) • Summary messages post-event
Solar Flare (Radio Burst) Impact on GPS – 6 Dec 2006 ~10 mins
Solar Radiation Storms (S Scale) • Arrival: 10’s of minutes to several hours • Duration: hours to days • Short-term warnings pre-onset • Alert for threshold crossing • Summary post-event
Geomagnetic Storms (G Scale) • Coronal Mass Ejections (CMEs) create geomagnetic storms • Arrival: ~18 – 96 hours • Duration: Hours to a day or two • Creates ionospheric storms, geomagnetically induced currents, aurora • 1-2 Day watch products based on coronagraph observations and modeling • Short-term (15 -60 min) warnings based on measurement at ACE spacecraft
GPS IMPACT – U.S. Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) Wide Area Augmentation System (WAAS) • Intense geomagnetic and ionosphere storms occur on 29 and 30 Oct, 2003 • Acceptable vertical error limits were exceeded for 15 and 11-hour periods METERS
Impacts on Electric Power Grid • CME impacts Earth’s magnetic field • Fluctuations generate electric fields on • Earth. These geomagnetically induced • currents (GIC) can flow into power lines • and transformers • Leads to transformer • saturation and • over-heating, voltage • drops, transformer • damage, or protective • device trips Transformer winding failure Transformer exit-lead overheating
Worst Case… …but is it a 100 year storm…200 year…?
Solar Cycle Predictions • Cycle 23 began in May 1996 • Peak in April 2000 with SSN = 120 • Solar Minimum in December 2008 • Solar Cycle 24 Underway
Information Dissemination • Phone Contact for Critical Stakeholders: NASA, Commercial Airlines, Power Generation and Distribution, FEMA, etc. • Product Subscription Service: Email-based, no cost subscription service open to all (first thing to go out) • Website: Data, products, and models all available there. Tops News heading that will provide updates for elevated space weather • AWIPS: product IDs @ http://www.swpc.noaa.gov/alerts/AlertsTable.html • Facebook: Active updates and education, secondary to official product dissemination means
Near-term Changes • Website overhaul underway • New look and feel, modern content management system • More user-friendly, updated content • Updated forecast products • Two forecasts per day with option for out-of-cycle, activity-driven updates • Forecast discussion with plain-language synopsis and explanation of rationale • Ovation Prime Auroral Model transition to operations • Continued improvement of geomagnetic storm products showing better nowcasts of regional disturbance information
NOAA Space Weather Prediction Center Boulder, Colorado www.spaceweather.gov