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NASA Unveils Integrated
Space Weather Analysis (iSWA) Tool
March 8, 2010
When NASA’s satellite operators need
accurate, real-time space-weather information, they turn to the
Community Coordinated Modeling Center (CCMC) of the Space Weather
Laboratory at NASA's Goddard Space Flight Center in Greenbelt, Md. The
CCMC’s newest and most advanced space-weather science tool is the
Integrated Space Weather Analysis (iSWA) system.
This sequence of images
is from a computer animation illustrating an artist's concept of Coronal
Mass Ejection (CME) cannibalism. Coronal Mass Ejections (CMEs) are
clouds of electrified, magnetic gas weighing billions of tons ejected
from the sun and hurled into space with speeds ranging from 12 to 1,250
miles per second (about 20 to 2,000 kilometers per second). Solar
researchers believe cannibal CMEs may be the source of 'complex ejecta'
CME clouds; those with a larger and more complex structure than typical
CMEs. These traits cause complex ejecta CMEs to trigger protracted
magnetic storms when they envelop Earth. NASA's iSWA system is designed
to collect and store data about space-weather activity like CMEs.
Click here to
View animation
The iSWA is a robust, integrated system provides information about space
weather conditions past, present, and future and, unlike many other
programs currently in use, has an interface that the user can customize
to suit a unique set of data requirements.
"The iSWA space-weather data analysis system offers a unique level of
customization and flexibility to maintain, modify, and add new tools and
data products as they become available," says Marlo Maddox, iSWA system
chief developer at NASA Goddard.
iSWA draws together information about conditions from the sun to the
boundary of the sun’s influence, known as the heliosphere. The iSWA
systems digests information from spacecraft including the National
Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration’s (NOAA) Geostationary
Operational Environmental Satellites (GOES), NASA’s Solar Terrestrial
Relations Observatory (STEREO), the joint European Space Agency and NASA
mission Solar and Heliospheric Observatory (SOHO), and NASA's Advanced
Composition Explorer (ACE).
Citizen scientists and science enthusiasts can also use the data,
models, and tools of the iSWA system. Similar to the way in which
armchair astronomers have used SOHO data to discover comets, enthusiasts
will find the iSWA system a wonderful resource for increasing their
familiarity with the concept of space weather.
“We are continuously evolving the iSWA system, and we hope that it will
benefit not only NASA satellite operators, but also that it may also
help space-weather forecasting at other agencies such as the Air Force
Weather Agency and NOAA," says Michael Hesse, chief of the Space Weather
Laboratory at NASA Goddard.
Space-weather information tends to be scattered over various Web sites.
NASA Goddard space physicist Antti Pulkkinen says the iSWA system
represents “the most comprehensive single interface for general
space-weather-related information,” providing data on past and current
space-weather events. The system allows the user to configure or design
custom displays of the information.
The system compiles data about conditions on the sun, in Earth's
magnetosphere -- the protective magnetic field that envelops our planet
-- and down to Earth's surface. It provides a user interface to provide
NASA's satellite operators and with a real-time view of space weather.
In addition to NASA, the iSWA system is used by the Air Force Weather
agency.
Access
to space-weather information that combines data from state-of-the-art
space-weather models with concurrent observations of the space
environment provides a powerful tool for users to obtain a personalized
“quick look” at space-weather information, detailed insight into
space-weather conditions, as well as tools for historical analysis of
the space-weather’s impact.
Development of the iSWA system has been a joint activity between the
Office of the Chief Engineer at NASA Headquarters and the Applied
Engineering and Technology Directorate and the Science and Exploration
Directorate at NASA Goddard. The iSWA system is located at NASA Goddard.
The Community Coordinated Modeling Center is funded by the Heliophysics
Division in the Science Mission Directorate at NASA Headquarters, and
the National Science Foundation. |