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ESA rocks space weather by Staff Writers Paris (ESA) Nov 06, 2018
This week, to coincide with the fifteenth annual European Space Weather Week, ESA is celebrating the dynamic phenomenon of space weather. It's difficult to comprehend the size and sheer power of our Sun - a churning ball of hot gas 4.6 billion years old and 1.3 million times larger than Earth - that for the most part remains a regular, yet distant part of our lives. In space this hotly glowing star plays a remarkable role, dominating the environment within our solar system. Unpredictable and temperamental, the Sun has made life on the inner planets of the Solar System impossible, due to the intense radiation combined with colossal amounts of energetic material it blasts in every direction, creating the ever-changing conditions in space known as 'space weather'. Considering all of this, how did life come to thrive on Earth? Our magnetic field protects us from the solar wind - the constant stream of electrons, protons and heavier ions from the Sun, and from Coronal Mass Ejections (CMEs) - the Sun's occasional outbursts of billion tonne clouds of solar plasma into space. The most extreme events, arrivals of fast CMEs or high speed solar wind streams disturb our protective magnetic shield, creating geomagnetic storms.
Serious problems for modern life While these events can't be stopped, advance warning of an oncoming solar storm would give operators of satellites, power grids and telecommunication systems time to take protective measures.
Watching for solar hazards Watching the Sun from a unique position in space, the Lagrange satellite will allow monitoring of the potentially hazardous sunspots and high-speed solar wind streams before they come into view from Earth, and detect solar events and their propagation toward the Earth with higher accuracy than is possible today. Data from the Lagrange mission will be transmitted to the Earth and distributed into ESA's Space Weather Service Network in near real-time, to generate warnings and forecasts. Protective measures against space weather are becoming increasingly important, as much of modern human society becomes ever more reliant on space-based services, vulnerable to the Sun's outbursts. As a result, at ESA's next Ministerial Council in 2019, space weather and the needed early warning services will be a main topic presented as part of the Agency's vision for the future in the emerging domain of space safety and security. This week, ESA will highlight the unique phenomenon of space weather, from the science behind it and how we study it, to its effect on satellites in space and ESA's plans for the future.
Grant for solar physics aims to understand the Sun in its entirety Gottingen, Germany (SPX) Oct 24, 2018 The European Research Council (ERC) will fund an ambitious solar physics project at the MPS over the next six years. The research project called WHOLESUN aims at understanding the origin of solar magnetic activity by studying the Sun in its entirety. It is funded through a prestigious Synergy Grant from the European Research Council (ERC), awarded to a team of four European principal investigators from the Max Planck Institute for Solar System Research (MPS) in Germany, the University of St. Andre ... read more
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