1 / 6

User sessions report Paris workshop 2010 Mike Hapgood mike.hapgood@stfc.ac.uk

User sessions report Paris workshop 2010 Mike Hapgood mike.hapgood@stfc.ac.uk. Dave Pitchford - space environment effects at SES little or no scope to respond to space weather events, valuable to have situational awareness want assured European long-term access to data and models

rhys
Download Presentation

User sessions report Paris workshop 2010 Mike Hapgood mike.hapgood@stfc.ac.uk

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. User sessions reportParis workshop 2010 Mike Hapgoodmike.hapgood@stfc.ac.uk

  2. Dave Pitchford - space environment effects at SES • little or no scope to respond to space weather events, • valuable to have situational awareness • want assured European long-term access to data and models • increasing use of COTS increases the importance of space weather conditions • involvement in the O3b project, (in this case around 8000 km altitude) • Alessandro Donati - activities at ESOC • decision support tool (SEIS) enables better management of environmental effects • extend data and models in SEIS • stimulated efforts to integrate SpW awareness into both design and operations activities.

  3. Bertram Arbesser-Rastburg - space weather effects on Galileo • radiation effects are severe <- MEO • much design effort to mitigate radiation effects; • project now appreciates the importance of monitoring the radiation environment. • Improve data coverage of environment in Galileo orbit • data from the first two test spacecraft available on request to scientists • support single-frequency receivers with improved iono model compared to GPS system. • warn of adverse conditions and to help design of robust receivers. • Marta Cueto Santamaría, GMV - satellite-based augmentation systems for GNSS • need better information on current levels of disturbance due to space weather, especially scintillation • need to assess the integrity of the service against current space weather. • Mike Hapgood - space weather needs for ice-monitoring (Cryosat-2) • stimulated by discussions with colleagues at the EISCAT radar project • radar altimetry to monitor ice thickness to centimetre accuracy • how to deal with polar patches? assess and reject?

  4. Colonel Mariusz Wojciechowski - Polish military interest in space weather, • Radio: communications, navigation systems and surveillance • Need to distinguish space weather impacts from human interference • some military requirements classified. • Bryn Jones, SolarMetrics, integrating space weather into aviation operations. • Cross-Polar Working Group, space weather sub-group • aviation requirements for space weather information: communications, radiation hazards, satnav • integration with SESAR and NextGen • effective delivery to aircrew, integration with weather briefing, 15 to 20 minutes to read • Report due late 2010 • ICAO standards by 2015. • Henning Lübbe - aircrew exposure to cosmic radiation, • statistical data on recent aircrew radiation exposure. • clear upward trend due to solar minimum • annual modulation (seasonal demand) • double peak in the overall distribution (long- and short-haul flights). • aircrew are work group with highest radiation exposure • need better handling of space weather inputs into flight planning, • early warning of high radiation fluxes • improved on-board monitoring

  5. Mauro Messerotti – NATO SSA activity • developing a definition of space situational awareness relevant to NATO activities • Plans for Technical Advisory Panel activity • Alexi Glover - SWENET lessons learned • many original services still operational • new services have joined • use of SWENET has grown significantly over the period • evidence of the growing demand for space weather services • complements cost-benefit analysis from pilot project

  6. General discussion • Moderated by Daniel Heynderickx, Mike Hapgood and Alexi Glover. • Access to data is vital. • What are useful space weather products? • Interpretation can be barrier to adoption of services. • Need for develop standards • Structure of product chain – encourage provision of value-added/layered services where one provider enhances the products provided by another. • Raise awareness of space weather issues, to educate users about effects, warnings and mitigate, those effects. • Especially working-level operations staff • Need for a common terminology from scientists to service providers to end users, • Forums for discussion • Need continuous dialogue between the space weather community and end users. • This must be a two-way exchange of information if we are to derive mutual benefit. • Timely to plan workshop(s) at which the space weather community and end users can meet to review any major space weather events that occur during forthcoming solar maximum.

More Related