space weather: solar drivers, impacts and forecasts henrik lundstedt swedish institute of space...
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Space weather: solar drivers, impacts and forecastsHenrik Lundstedt
Swedish Institute of Space PhysicsLund
We live inside the continuously expanding solar corona, i.e. the solar wind, which can be very strong e.g. at times of CMEs. Earth is also exposedto very intense radiation at times of so called solar flares. The Sun is also inside a stellar wind and a flow of cosmic rays. This space weather hasimpacts on both Earth’s atmosphere and technological systems. To mitigate the effects of the space weatherwe need to forecast it and start to learn to live with the Sun.
OutlineOutline
• How do we define space weather?
• How do we observe it? (solar weather)
• What drives it? (solar activity and solar phenomena)
• Which are the impacts on:
the Earth’s atmosphere and technological systems?
• How can we forecast it?
• What services exist?
• Today’s space weather.
”Rymdväder” was mentioned the first time in media 1991!
The US National Space Weather Program 1995: ”Space weather refers to conditions on the sun, and in the solar wind, magnetosphere, ionosphere and thermosphere that can influence the performance and reliability of space-borne and ground-based technological systems and endanger human life or health”. LWS 2001 and ILWS 2002.
ESA Space Weather Programme started in April 1999. ESA Space Weather Pilot projectsstart in April 2003. SWWT, EU COST 724 Space Weather.
Space weather Space weather
HD 1981 (cykel 21)
SDS 1991 (cycle 22)
SDS 1991 (cycle 22)Arbetet 1981 (cycle 21)
Workshops arranged in LundWorkshops arranged in Lund
Workshops on ”Artificial Intelligence Applications in Solar-Terrestrial Physics” were held in Lund 1993 and 1997.
John Freeman (Rice University, Houston, TX) coined the word ”space weather”
The SunThe Sun
Diameter:1 390 000 km(109 x Earth)
Mass:1.99x1030 kg(330 000 x Earth)
Density:Core 151x103 kg/m-3
Average 1.41x103 kg/m-3
The Sun consits of:H (≈ 90%)Helium (≈ 10%)C,N,O ( ≈ 0.1%)
Temperature:Core 15 millionPhotosphere 5800 K Chromosphere 4300-104KCorona 1-30 million K 4 protons --> He + 2 positrons + 2 neutrinos + 2 fotons (26.2 MeV)
A plasma A plasma
A plasma is a quasineutral gas of charged and neutral particles, which exhibits collevtive behavior.
Three conditions aplasma must satisfy.
λD =6.9(T /n)1/2cm
ω=9000n1/2s−1
Xspace from UCLAXspace from UCLA
Plasma equationsPlasma equations
Macroscopic plasma quantities:By taking velocity moments of the particle distribution function fs(x,v,t) for particles of species s in six-dimensional phase space we obtain macroscopic measurable quantities such as bulk velocity, pressureand the temperature.
Macroscopic equations:By taking velocity moments of the Vlasov equation we obtain the fluidequations of a plasma in terms of the macroscopic variables. The zerothand first order moments, result in continuity equation and fluid equation of motion.
Magnetohydrodynamic (MHD) approximation
Magnetohydrodynamic (MHD) approximation
Induction equation
Equation of continuity
Equation of motion
Maxwell’ equations and Ohm’s law give the induction equation.
We need to observe V and B.
Solar observationsSolar observations
• Where on Earth do we observe the Sun?
• What spacecrafts observe the Sun?
• How do we observe V and B on the Sun?
Solar observations in California Solar observations in California
Mount Wilson Observatory
Big Bear Solar Observatory Wilcox Solar
Observatory
Internet-accessible robotic solar telescope in Livermore
French solar observation facilitiesFrench solar observation facilities
Pic du Midi (Coronagraph, (Lyot)
THEMIS on Tenerife (solar magnetic field)
Radioheliograph at Nancay (CMEs)
Solar observations with the Swedish solar telescope on La Palma
Solar observations with the Swedish solar telescope on La Palma
Advanced Technology Solar Telescope
Advanced Technology Solar Telescope
QuickTime™ and aGIF decompressorare needed to see this picture.
4-m telescope0.1” resolutionOperational 2009National SolarObservatory
15 000 antennas with receivers and senders,arranged in 100 clusters distributed withi a circle of 350 kmsdiameter. Data transfer rate 25 Tbits/s. Frequency 10-250 MHz (30-1.5m)
Probing CMEs in radio wavelengths with a solar radar in Sweden 2003-2006
Probing CMEs in radio wavelengths with a solar radar in Sweden 2003-2006
ACE was launched in August 25, 1997ACE was launched in August 25, 1997
Solar wind observations with ACE make accurate forecasts 1-3 hours ahead possible.
STEREO - planned launch November 2005STEREO - planned launch November 2005
Solar Orbiter - planned launch 2009Solar Orbiter - planned launch 2009
Study the Sun fromclose-up (45 solar radii,.21 au), (0.05 arcsec) latitude as highas 38 degrees
SDO - planned launch April 2008SDO - planned launch April 2008
Geosynchronous orbit
Living with a Star (LWS)
Living with a Star (LWS)
SOHO was launched on 2 December 1995
SOHO has given us a totally new picture of the Sun- always activeSOHO has given us a totally new picture of the Sun- always active
• Solar Heliospheric Observatory was launched on December 2, 1995
• SOHO carries three instruments observing the solar interior, six the solar corona and three the solar wind
How do we observe the solar rotation and oscillation?
How do we observe the solar rotation and oscillation?
I =12I 0(λ+ΔλB)+I0(λ −ΔλB)[ ],V =
12I0(λ+ΔλB)−I0(λ −ΔλB)[ ]
vB =ΔλB /ΔλD,ΔλB =4.7⋅10−8gλ2B,ΔλD =(2RT/A)λ /c,v=Δλ / ΔλD
ΔλB <<ΔλD ⇒ V =vBdIdv
,λ =525.05nm,ΔλD =42mÅ,g =3,r0 =0.7⇒
V / I ≈9.6×10−4B,B=10gauss⇒ 1%−cirkulär−polarisation
Dopplergram shows the solarrotation
Dopplergram shows the solarrotation
Dopplergrams show the solaroscillations
Dopplergrams show the solaroscillations
How do we observe the solar magnetic field?
How do we observe the solar magnetic field?
I =12I 0(λ+ΔλB)+I0(λ −ΔλB)[ ],V =
12I0(λ+ΔλB)−I0(λ −ΔλB)[ ]
vB =ΔλB /ΔλD,ΔλB =4.7⋅10−8gλ2B,ΔλD =(2RT/A)λ /c,v=Δλ / ΔλD
ΔλB <<ΔλD ⇒ V =vBdIdv
,λ =525.05nm,ΔλD =42mÅ,g =3,r0 =0.7⇒
V / I ≈9.6×10−4B,B=10gauss⇒ 1%−cirkulär−polarisation
When the solar magnetic field emerges thru the solar suface sunspots appearWhen the solar magnetic field emerges thru the solar suface sunspots appear
The SunThe Sun
Diameter:1 390 000 km(109 x Earth)
Mass:1.99x1030 kg(330 000 x Earth)
Density:Core 151x103 kg/m-3
Average 1.41x103 kg/m-3
The Sun consits of:H (≈ 90%)Helium (≈ 10%)C,N,O ( ≈ 0.1%)
Temperature:Core 15 millionPhotosphere 5800 K Chromosphere 4300-104KCorona 1-30 million K 4 protons --> He + 2 positrons + 2 neutrinos + 2 fotons (26.2 MeV)
The oscillations reveal solar interiorThe oscillations reveal solar interior
The oscillations at the surface of the Sun are reflections of thestanding sound waves that fill the interior. Each standing wave(or n, l, m mode) is trapped between the surface and some critical depth.
QuickTime™ and aCinepak Codec by Radius[32] decompressorare needed to see this picture.
A standard solar modelA standard solar model
dMdr
=ρ4πr2,dpdr
=−MGr2 ρ,
dLdr
=ερ4πr2
dTdr
⎛ ⎝
⎞ ⎠ =−
316πT3
L4πr2κρ
dTdr
⎛ ⎝
⎞ ⎠ =
γ −1γ
Tpdpdr
L = luminosity (amount of energy radiated per unit time, measured in watts) = energy generated per unit mass per unit time in the core = opacity
Energy transferred by radiation by convection
The mass equation, equation of hydrostatic equilibrium, equation for energy balance and equation for radiation energy transfer determine the evolution of the Sun.
The model must reproduce the observed luminosity and radiusof the Sun at its present age from the solar mass, initial chemicalcomposition and age.
Sound speed reveals temperature of solar interior
Sound speed reveals temperature of solar interior
Sound speed reveals rotation conditions in solar interior
Sound speed reveals rotation conditions in solar interior
Solar waves reveal the source of solar magnetic activity
Solar waves reveal the source of solar magnetic activity
Why a flux tube emerges thru the solar surface
Why a flux tube emerges thru the solar surface
When the solar magnetic field emerges thru the solar suface sunspots appearWhen the solar magnetic field emerges thru the solar suface sunspots appear
Why sunspots live so longWhy sunspots live so long
MDI shows how magnetic elements form sunspots(local helioseismology)
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Sunspots on far sideSunspots on far side
Butterfly diagramButterfly diagram
Sunspot solar cycles Sunspot solar cycles
Schwabe found the 11- year sunspot solar cycle. R = k(10g + f).Gleissberg found the 80-90 years cycle.Maunder-Spörer 207 years cycle,Houtermans cycle 2272 years and Sharma 100 000 years cycle.
The two peaks of solar activity, 1.3 years separated!
A Maunder minimum suddenly?A Maunder minimum suddenly?
In the beginning of 1640 the sunspotnumber suddenly decreased to near zero.
The Maunder Minimum started1645 and ended1715.
The number of severe proton events follow the Gleissberg cycle and might increase with a factor 8-10. A maximum occurred 1980. A new warm ”Grand Maximum” (1050-1250) has been suggested by J. Lean 2030-2040.
Gleissberg maximum?Gleissberg maximum?
(The Carington event 1859 September 1 produced a white light flare, >30MeV proton fluency 4-8 times ”worst case” 1972, a CME v=2500km/s, 18h later a super-storm with Dst = -1760nT!).
Rapid changes for other solar type stars
Rapid changes for other solar type stars
HD 149661 (K0V 17.4 +4.0 years) multiple cycles
HD 9562 (G2V) Maunder minimum state
HD101501 (G8V) chaotic
HD 136202 (F8IV) 23 years Sun (G2V) 10.0 years HD 10476 (K1V) 9.6 years
For a solar type star the luminosity decreased with 0.4%på in just a few years. Similar rapid changes happened during the Maunder minimum! (compare 1640-1645!)
Mount Wilson studies
Non-linear chaotic solar dynamo (N. Weiss)
Non-linear chaotic solar dynamo (N. Weiss)
A complex generalization of the three ordinaryLorenz diff equations.
The toroidal magnetic field for a dynamo.
As the dynamo number D increasesD1 (no activity) ->D2 (cycle activity) ->D3 (chaotic activity)
meridionalDynamomeridionalDynamo
Peter Gillman and Mausumi Dikpati(Astrophys. J, 2001)
Our scientific approachOur scientific approach
Web page www.lund.irf.se
Web page www.lund.irf.se
Solar activity and temperatureduring longer periods
Solar activity and temperatureduring longer periods
J. Eddy 1976Meton (in Greece) claimed400 B.C. that high solaractivity was related towet climate.
Christmas day 1690 - during Maunder minimum
Christmas day 1690 - during Maunder minimum
It’s heavily snowing in Rome and on the French riviera.
Children are skating on Thames River in London and they have annual frost fairs.
In Amsterdam the canals are frozen.
In Paris the snow is deep.
Europa experienced ”Little Ice Age”.
Lund during the Middle Ages and the Maunder minimum
Lund during the Middle Ages and the Maunder minimum
The Danish kingdom during Knud the great (1016). During the Middle Ages Lund prospered, Lund was called the capital of Denmark (Metropolis Daniea). Rich could drink excellent wine from England (e.g. from Abbey of Abingdon). Today Bothy Vineyard, south of Oxford.
The Swedish king Karl X Gustaf looks at theice before the crossing of the Belts 1658. The battle in Lund follows in December 4, 1676 and Lund becomes Swedish.
Wavelet studies of solar activityand global temperature - trendsWavelet studies of solar activityand global temperature - trends
The Sun has neverbeen as active asafter 1940 during thelast 1000 years (Phys. Rev. Lett. 2003)
Solar Activity and Earth’s ClimateSolar Activity and Earth’s Climate
The evolution of the grand atmosphere: the solar atmosphere
The evolution of the grand atmosphere: the solar atmosphere
The solar luminosity (total energy output per unit time in the form of electromagnetic radiation). The total flux at mean distance of the Earth from the Sun, the total irradiance at mean distance or solar constant S. S = L/4A2. S=1367± 3W/m2 , L=(3.844± 0.010)x1026 W
The solar luminosity has increased during its main-sequence life from 0.7L to the present value. A reduction today of S by a factor 0.7 would probably have lead to a complete ice cover of Earth. Geological evidence suggests it never was. The solution of the puzzle probably lies in the evolution of the Earth’s atmosphere. The Sun’s radius has increased from about 0.87r to present radius. Three billions years from now, the Sun’s radius has increased so much that the oceans on earth has vaporized. About 7.5 billion years from now the Sun is transferred into giant star engulf Earth, melts away everything and then ends as a white dwarf not bigger than earth.
Solar radiation variation with the solar cycle
Solar radiation variation with the solar cycle
QuickTime™ and aYUV420 codec decompressorare needed to see this picture.
Real-time Helioseismological Data SDO 2007Historical Data SOHO/MDI
Real-time Helioseismological Data SDO 2007Historical Data SOHO/MDI
Solar activity --> UV-radiation --> Ozone -->
North Atlantic Oscillation --> T Solar activity --> UV-radiation --> Ozone -->
North Atlantic Oscillation --> T
Drew Shindell’s (NASA GSFC) models show that weak UV (i.e. low solar activity), results in lower amount of ozone, which influences AO/NAO and herwith cause a decrease of the temperature (MM locally1.5C).
Maunder Minimum
Solar wind’s effect on climateSolar wind’s effect on climate
(GRL, Vol 29, No.15, 2002)
A possible explanation of the solar influence on climate
A possible explanation of the solar influence on climate
Many sunspots high solar activity
Less cosmic radiation
Less clouds formed
Increase temperature warmer climate
The solar corona magnetic field has increased with131% since 1901.
Cloudes have 100 times more effect on weather and climate than CO2. The effects of a doubling of the CO2, that is stated to happen within 100 years could a cloud coverage change Counteract in 3.5 years!
The Maunder minimum could beexplained.
Will the change of Earth’s magnetic field influence climate?
Will the change of Earth’s magnetic field influence climate?
The solar influence on Earth’s weather and climate
The solar influence on Earth’s weather and climate
END
Part 1