CME Week: How NASA Watches CMEs
Two main types of explosions occur on the sun: solar flares and coronal mass ejections. Unlike the energy and x-rays produced in a solar flare – which can reach Earth at the speed of light in eight minutes – coronal mass ejections are giant clouds of solar material that take one to three days to reach Earth. Once at Earth, these ejections, also called CMEs, can impact satellites in space or interfere with radio communications. During CME Week from Sept. 22 to 26, 2014, we explore different aspects of these giant eruptions that surge out from the star we live with.
Space weather models combined with real time observations help scientists track CMEs. These images were produced from a model known as ENLIL named after the Sumerian storm god. It shows the journey of a CME on March 5, 2013, as it moved toward Mars.
Image Credit:
NASA/Goddard/SWRC/CCMC
Those who study Earth's weather have a luxury of data points to study. From thousands of weather stations measuring temperature and rainfall to satellites tracking storm fronts up in space, meteorologists can watch detailed maps of the weather as it sweeps across land or sea.
"Over the past ten years, we have had a major breakthrough in understanding space weather," said Antti Pulkkinen a space weather scientist at NASA's Goddard Space Flight Center in Greenbelt, Maryland. "We can now track the basic properties of CMEs. When our solar observatories see a CME, we can tell what direction it's going in and how fast it's traveling."
Improved observations combined with improved models has led to hybrid descriptions of a CME, relying partially on computer simulations and partially on actual observations. NASA houses a collection of space weather models available for public access at the Community Coordinated Modeling Center at Goddard. Together with observations they can provide a holistic picture of any given CME.
Join NASA Sept 22-26 for CME Week. Follow @NASASunEarth and ask questions at #CMEWeek on Twitter.
"Over the past ten years, we have had a major breakthrough in understanding space weather," said Antti Pulkkinen a space weather scientist at NASA's Goddard Space Flight Center in Greenbelt, Maryland. "We can now track the basic properties of CMEs. When our solar observatories see a CME, we can tell what direction it's going in and how fast it's traveling."
Improved observations combined with improved models has led to hybrid descriptions of a CME, relying partially on computer simulations and partially on actual observations. NASA houses a collection of space weather models available for public access at the Community Coordinated Modeling Center at Goddard. Together with observations they can provide a holistic picture of any given CME.
Join NASA Sept 22-26 for CME Week. Follow @NASASunEarth and ask questions at #CMEWeek on Twitter.
By gathering data from numerous observatories, scientists can create models and explore what-if scenarios about what would happen near Earth due to a given CME. Watch the video to learn more about what scientists can see in these models.
Image Credit:
NASA/Bridgman/Duberstein
Such information on the CME's entire path opens the door to understanding why any given characteristic of the CME near the sun might lead to a given effect near Earth. Each additional piece of the puzzle helps us better understand just what causes these giant eruptions -- and whether or not any particular CME could pose a hazard to astronauts as well as technology in space and on the ground.
By gathering data from numerous observatories, scientists can create models and explore what-if scenarios about what would happen near Earth due to a given CME. Watch the video to learn more about what scientists can see in these models.
Image Credit:
NASA/Bridgman/Duberstein
Such information on the CME's entire path opens the door to understanding why any given characteristic of the CME near the sun might lead to a given effect near Earth. Each additional piece of the puzzle helps us better understand just what causes these giant eruptions -- and whether or not any particular CME could pose a hazard to astronauts as well as technology in space and on the ground.
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