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  • Solar Physics  (132)
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  • 1
    Publication Date: 2019-07-12
    Description: As the present solar cycle passes into its minimum phase, the Hinode mission marks its tenth year of investigating solar activity. Hinode's decade of successful observations have provided us with immeasurable insight into the solar processes that invoke space weather and thereby affect the interplanetary environment in which we reside. The mission's complementary suite of instruments allows us to probe transient, high energy events alongside long-term, cycle-dependent phenomena from magnetic fields at the Sun's surface out to highly thermalized coronal plasma enveloping active regions (ARs). These rich data sets have already changed the face of solar physics and will continue to provoke exciting research as new observational paradigms are pursued. Hinode was launched as part of the Science Mission Directorate's (SMD) Solar Terrestrial Probes Program in 2006. It is a sophisticated spacecraft equipped with a Solar Optical Telescope (SOT), an Extreme-ultraviolet Imaging Spectrometer (EIS), and an X-Ray Telescope (XRT) (see x 4). With high resolution and sensitivity, Hinode serves as a microscope for the Sun, providing us with unique capabilities for observing magnetic fields near the smallest scales achievable, while also rendering full-Sun coronal context in the highest thermal regimes. The 2014 NASA SMD strategic goals objective to "Understand the Sun and its interactions with the Earth and the solar system, including space weather" forms the basis of three underlying Heliophysics Science Goals. While Hinode relates to all three, the observatory primarily addresses: Explore the physical processes in the space environment from the Sun to the Earth and through the solar system. Within the NASA National Research Council (NRC) Decadal Survey Priorities, Hinode targets: (a) Determine the origins of the Sun's activity and predict the variations of the space environment and (d) Discover and characterize fundamental processes that occur both within the heliosphere and throughout the universe. In response to the 2012 NRC Decadal Survey Science Challenges and 2014 Heliophysics Roadmap Research Focus Areas, the Hinode mission has set forth four Prioritized Science Goals (PSGs): (a) Study the sources and evolution of highly energetic dynamic events; (b) Characterize cross-scale magnetic field topology and stability; (c) Trace mass and energy flow from the photosphere to the corona; and (d) Continue long term synoptic support to quantify cycle variability.
    Keywords: Solar Physics
    Type: MSFC-E-DAA-TN40198
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  • 2
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    In:  CASI
    Publication Date: 2019-07-12
    Description: No abstract available
    Keywords: Solar Physics
    Type: MSFC-E-DAA-TN51857
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  • 3
    Publication Date: 2019-07-19
    Description: Prediction of solar magnetic activity on various temporal scales is a fundamental element of space weather, which requires a wide range of theoretical and observational expertise in solar phenomena from the deep interior to the corona. Historical observations have revealed many features of cyclic variations of the solar activity; but these data are dramatically insufficient to draw a physical picture of global magnetic field evolution. New observational data, currently available from space missions and ground-based observatories, provide us with detailed information about solar dynamics and magnetism. However, because of the relatively short duration of data series and the great variety of data types and quality, it is challenging to assimilate these data in theoretical models and make reliable forecasts. The recent unexpectedly weak solar activity cycles, as well as observations of rotational and magnetic topology transitions in solar-type stars, suggest that the Sun and its magnetic dynamo are currently in a very interesting evolutionary stage. This could relate to the difficulty in getting a model of the Sun to produce solar-like rather than anti-solar-like differential rotation, to reproduce the rotation profile obtained from helioseismology, and to predict solar activity cycles.
    Keywords: Solar Physics
    Type: ARC-E-DAA-TN44458 , SHINE Conference 2017; Jul 24, 2017 - Jul 28, 2017; Saint-Sauveur; Canada
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  • 4
    Publication Date: 2019-07-13
    Description: The recent prolonged activity minimum has led to the question of whether there is a base level of the solar magnetic field evolution that yields a ''floor'' in activity levels and also in the solar wind magnetic field strength. Recently, a flux transport model coupled with magneto-frictional simulations has been used to simulate the continuous magnetic field evolution in the global solar corona for over 15 years, from 1996 to 2012. Flux rope eruptions in the simulations are estimated (Yeates), and the results are in remarkable agreement with the shape of the SOlar Heliospheric Observatory/Large Angle and Spectrometric Coronagraph Experiment coronal mass ejection (CME) rate distribution. The eruption rates at the two recent minima approximate the observed-corrected CME rates, supporting the idea of a base level of solar magnetic activity. In this paper, we address this issue by comparing annual averages of the CME occurrence rates during the last four solar cycle minima with several tracers of the global solar magnetic field. We conclude that CME activity never ceases during a cycle, but maintains a base level of 1 CME every 1.5 to approx. 3 days during minima. We discuss the sources of these CMEs.
    Keywords: Solar Physics
    Type: GSFC-E-DAA-TN53060 , The Astrophysical Journal (ISSN 0004-637X) (e-ISSN 1538-4357); 851; 2; 142
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  • 5
    Publication Date: 2019-07-13
    Description: The underlying origin of solar eruptive events (SEEs), ranging from giant coronal mass ejections to small coronalhole jets, is that the lowest-lying magnetic flux in the Sun's corona undergoes continual buildup of stress and free energy. This magnetic stress has long been observed as the phenomenon of "filament channels:" strongly sheared magnetic field localized around photospheric polarity inversion lines. However, the mechanism for the stress buildup-formation of filament channels-is still debated. We present magnetohydrodynamic simulations of a coronal volume that is driven by transient, cellular boundary flows designed to model the processes by which the photosphere drives the corona. The key feature of our simulations is that they accurately preserve magnetic helicity, the topological quantity that is conserved even in the presence of ubiquitous magnetic reconnection. Although small-scale random stress is injected everywhere at the photosphere, driving stochastic reconnection throughout the corona, the net result of the magnetic evolution is a coherent shearing of the lowest-lying field lines. This highly counterintuitive result-magnetic stress builds up locally rather than spreading out to attain a minimum energy state-explains the formation of filament channels and is the fundamental mechanism underlying SEEs. Furthermore, this process is likely to be relevant to other astrophysical and laboratory plasmas.
    Keywords: Solar Physics
    Type: GSFC-E-DAA-TN51341 , Astrophysical Journal Letters (ISSN 2041-8205) (e-ISSN 2041-8213); 851; 1; L17
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  • 6
    Publication Date: 2019-07-13
    Description: We report on a study comparing coronal flux ropes inferred from eruption data with their interplanetary counterparts constructed from in situ data. The eruption data include the source region magnetic field, post-eruption arcades, and coronal mass ejections (CMEs). Flux ropes were fit to the interplanetary CMEs (ICMEs) considered for the 2011 and 2012 Coordinated Data Analysis Workshops (CDAWs). We computed the total reconnected flux involved in each of the associated solar eruptions and found it to be closely related to flare properties, CME kinematics, and ICME properties. By fitting flux ropes to the white-light coronagraph data, we obtained the geometric properties of the flux ropes and added magnetic properties derived from the reconnected flux. We found that the CME magnetic field in the corona is significantly higher than the ambient magnetic field at a given heliocentric distance. The radial dependence of the flux rope magnetic field strength is faster than that of the ambient magnetic field. The magnetic field strength of the coronal flux rope is also correlated with that in interplanetary flux ropes constructed from in situ data, and with the observed peak magnetic field strength in ICMEs. The physical reason for the observed correlation between the peak field strength in MCs is the higher magnetic field content in faster coronal flux ropes and ultimately the higher reconnected flux in the eruption region. The magnetic flux ropes constructed from the eruption data and coronagraph observations provide a realistic input that can be used by various models to predict the magnetic properties of ICMEs at Earth and other destination in the heliosphere.
    Keywords: Solar Physics
    Type: GSFC-E-DAA-TN50080 , Journal of Atmospheric and Solar-Terrestrial Physics (ISSN 1364-6826)
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  • 7
    Publication Date: 2019-07-13
    Description: We studied three solar energetic particle (SEP) events observed on 14 August 2010, 3 November 2011, and 5 March 2013 by Solar Terrestrial Relations Observatory (STEREO) A, B, and near-Earth (L1) spacecraft with a longitudinal distribution of particles greater than 90 degrees. Using a forward modeling method combined with extreme ultraviolet and white-light images, we determined the angular extent of the shock, the time and location (cobpoint) of the shock intersection with the magnetic field line connecting to each spacecraft, and compute the shock speed at the cobpoint of each spacecraft. We then examine whether the observations of SEPs at each spacecraft were accelerated and injected by the spatially extended shocks or whether another mechanism such as cross-field transport is required for an alternative explanation. Our analyses results indicate that the SEPs observed at the three spacecraft on 3 November, STEREO B (STB) and L1 on 14 August, and the 5 March SEP event at STEREO A (STA) can be explained by the direct shock acceleration. This is consistent with the observed significant anisotropies, short time delays between particle release times and magnetic connection times, and sharp rises in the SEP time profiles. Cross-field diffusion is the likely cause for the 14 August SEP event observed by STA and the 5 March SEPs observed by STB and L1 spacecraft, as particle observations featured weak electron anisotropies and slow rising intensity profiles. Otherwise, the wide longitudinal spread of these SEP increases would require an existence of a circumsolar shock, which may not be a correct assumption in the corona and heliosphere.
    Keywords: Solar Physics
    Type: GSFC-E-DAA-TN50953 , Journal of Geophysical Research: Space Physics (ISSN 2169-9380) (e-ISSN 2169-9402); 122; 7; 7021–7041
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  • 8
    Publication Date: 2019-07-13
    Description: We report on further evidence that solar energetic particles are organized by the kinematic properties of coronal mass ejections (CMEs). In particular, we focus on the starting frequency of type II bursts, which is related to the distance from the Sun where the radio emission starts. We find that the three groups of solar energetic particle (SEP) events known to have distinct values of CME initial acceleration, also have distinct average starting frequencies of the associated type II bursts. SEP events with ground level enhancement (GLE) have the highest starting frequency (107 MHz), while those associated with filament eruption (FE) in quiescent regions have the lowest starting frequency (22 MHz); regular SEP events have intermediate starting frequency (81 MHz). Taking the onset time of type II bursts as the time of shock formation, we determine the shock formation heights measured from the Sun center. We find that the shocks form on average closest to the Sun (1.51 Rs) in GLE events, farthest from the Sun in FE SEP events (5.38 Rs), and at intermediate distances in regular SEP events (1.72 Rs). Finally, we present the results of a case study of a CME with high initial acceleration (approx.3 km s-2) and a type II radio burst with high starting frequency (approx. 200 MHz) but associated with a minor SEP event. We find that the relation between the fluence spectral index and CME initial acceleration continues to hold even for this minor SEP event.
    Keywords: Solar Physics
    Type: GSFC-E-DAA-TN50955 , Journal of Physics: Conference Series (ISSN 1742-6588) (e-ISSN 1742-6596); 900; 1; 012009
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  • 9
    Publication Date: 2019-07-13
    Description: No abstract available
    Keywords: Solar Physics
    Type: JSC-CN-40403 , Space Environment Engineering and Science Applications Workshop; Sep 05, 2017 - Sep 09, 2017; Boulder, CO; United States
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  • 10
    Publication Date: 2019-07-13
    Description: Coronal fans (see Figure 1) are bright observational structures that extend to large distances above the solar surface and can easily be seen in EUV (174 angstrom) above the limb. They have a very long lifetime and can live up to several Carrington rotations (CR), remaining relatively stationary for many months. Note that they are not off-limb manifestation of similarly-named active region fans. The solar conditions required to create coronal fans are not well understood. The goal of this research was to find as many associations as possible of coronal fans with other solar features and to gain a better understanding of these structures. Therefore, we analyzed many fans and created an overview of their properties. We present the results of this statistical analysis and also a case study on the longest living fan.
    Keywords: Solar Physics
    Type: MSFC-E-DAA-TN45991 , European Solar Physics Meeting; Sep 04, 2017 - Sep 08, 2017; Budapest; Hungary
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  • 11
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    In:  CASI
    Publication Date: 2019-07-13
    Description: A Conference on Measurement Techniques for Solar and Space Physics was held on 20-24 April 2015 in Boulder, Colorado, at the National Center for Atmospheric Research Center Green Campus. The present volume collects together the conference papers for photons and ground-based categories. This gathering of over 200 scientists and instrumentalists was born out of the desire to collect in one place the latest experiment and instrument technologies required for advancement of scientific knowledge in the disciplines of solar and space physics. The two goals for this conference and the subsequent publication of its content are (a) to describe measurement techniques and technology development needed to advance high priority science in the fields of solar and space physics; and (b) to provide a survey or reference of techniques for in situ measurement and remote sensing of space plasmas. Towards this end, our goal has always been inspired by the two 1998 Geophysical Monographs (Nos. 102 and 103) entitled, "Measurement Techniques in Space Plasmas" (particles and fields) [Pfaff et al., 1998a, 1998b], which have served as a reference and resource for advanced students, engineers, and scientists who wish to learn the fundamentals of measurement techniques and technology in this field. Those monographs were the product of an American Geophysical Union Chapman Conference that took place in Santa Fe, NM, in 1995: "Measurement Techniques in Space Plasmas-What Works, What Doesn't." Two decades later, we believe that it is appropriate to revisit this subject, in light of recent advances in technology, research platforms, and analysis techniques. Moreover, we now include direct measurements of neutral gases in the upper atmosphere, optical imaging techniques, and remote observations in space and on the ground. Accordingly, the workshop was organized among four areas of measurement techniques: particles, fields, photons, and ground-based. This two-set volume is largely composed of the content of that workshop. Special attention is given to those techniques and technologies that demonstrate promise of significant advancement in measurements that will enable the highest priority science as described in the 2012 National Research Council Decadal Survey [Baker and Zurbuchen et al., 2013]. Additionally, a broad tutorial survey of the current technologies is provided to serve as reference material and as a basis from which advanced and innovative ideas can be discussed and pursued. Included are instrumentation and techniques to observe the solar environment from its interior to its outer atmosphere, the heliosphere out to the interstellar regions, in geospace, and other planetary magnetospheres and atmospheres. To make significant progress in priority science as expressed in the National Research Council solar and space physics decadal survey and recent NASA Heliophysics roadmaps, identification of enabling new measurement techniques and technologies to be developed is required. Also, it is valuable to the community and future scientists and engineers to have a complete survey of the techniques and technologies used by the practitioners of solar and space physics. As with the 1995 conference and subsequent 1998 publication, it is incumbent on the community to identify those measurements that are particularly challenging and still require new techniques to be identified and tested to enable the necessary accuracy and resolution of certain parameters to be achieved. The following is a partial list of the measurement technique categories that are featured in these special publications: Particles; Thermal plasma to MeV energetic particles, neutral gas properties including winds, density, temperature, and composition, and enhanced neutral atom imaging; Fields; DC electric and magnetic fields, plasma waves, and electron drift instruments from which the plasma velocity information provides a measure of the DC electric field; Photons; Instruments sensitive from the near-infrared to X-rays; Contributions of techniques and technology for optical design, optical components, sensors, material selection for cameras, telescopes, and spectrographs; Ground based; Remote sensing methods for solar and geospace activity and space weather. The focus includes solar observatories, all-sky cameras, lidars, and ionosphere thermosphere mesosphere observatory systems such as radars, ionosondes, GPS receivers, magnetometers, conjugate observations, and airborne campaigns. The present volume collects together the papers for photons and ground-based categories. The companion volume collects together the papers for particles and fields categories. It is recognized that there are measurement techniques that overlap among the four categories. For example, use of microchannel plate detectors is used in photon and particle measurement techniques or the observation of visible photons and magnetic fields in space and on the ground share common technologies. Therefore, the reader should consider the entire collection of papers as they seek to understand particular applications. We hope that these volumes will be as valuable as a reference for our community as the earlier 1998 volumes have been.
    Keywords: Solar Physics
    Type: MSFC-E-DAA-TN45616 , Journal of Geophysical Research: Space Physics (ISSN 2169-9380) (e-ISSN 2169-9402); 122; 2; 1437–1438|Conference on Measurement Techniques for Solar and Space Physics; Apr 20, 2017 - Apr 24, 2017; Boulder, CO; United States
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  • 12
    Publication Date: 2019-07-13
    Description: No abstract available
    Keywords: Solar Physics
    Type: MSFC-E-DAA-TN46006 , Presentation at Alabama A&M University; Aug 16, 2017; Huntsville, AL; United States
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  • 13
    Publication Date: 2019-07-13
    Description: No abstract available
    Keywords: Solar Physics
    Type: MSFC-E-DAA-TN45400 , Learning Quest Class- Huntsville Library; Aug 11, 2017; Huntsville, AL; United States
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  • 14
    Publication Date: 2019-07-13
    Description: No abstract available
    Keywords: Solar Physics
    Type: MSFC-E-DAA-TN45601 , Solar Eclipse Training Session; Aug 10, 2017; Huntsville, AL; United States
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  • 15
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    In:  CASI
    Publication Date: 2019-07-13
    Description: No abstract available
    Keywords: Solar Physics
    Type: MSFC-E-DAA-TN45804 , US Space & Rocket Center Counselor Training; Aug 08, 2017; Huntsville, AL; United States
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  • 16
    Publication Date: 2019-07-13
    Description: In high energy solar astrophysics, imaging hard X-rays by direct focusing offers higher dynamic range and greater sensitivity compared to past techniques that used indirect imaging. The Focusing Optics X-ray Solar Imager (FOXSI) is a sounding rocket payload which uses seven sets of nested Wolter-I figured mirrors that, together with seven high-sensitivity semiconductor detectors, observes the Sun in hard X-rays by direct focusing. The FOXSI rocket has successfully flown twice and is funded to fly a third time in Summer 2018. The Wolter-I geometry consists of two consecutive mirrors, one paraboloid, and one hyperboloid, that reflect photons at grazing angles. Correctly focused X-rays reflect twice, once per mirror segment. For extended sources, like the Sun, off-axis photons at certain incident angles can reflect on only one mirror and still reach the focal plane, generating a pattern of single-bounce photons that can limit the sensitivity of the observation of faint focused X-rays. Understanding and cutting down the singly reflected rays on the FOXSI optics will maximize the instrument's sensitivity of the faintest solar sources for future flights. We present an analysis of the FOXSI singly reflected rays based on ray-tracing simulations, as well as the effectiveness of different physical strategies to reduce them.
    Keywords: Solar Physics
    Type: MSFC-E-DAA-TN45609 , SPIE Optics + Photonics; Aug 06, 2017 - Aug 10, 2017; San Diego, CA; United States
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  • 17
    Publication Date: 2019-07-13
    Description: No abstract available
    Keywords: Solar Physics
    Type: MSFC-E-DAA-TN46189 , 2017-IAPSO-IAMAS-IAGA Joint Assembly; Aug 27, 2017 - Sep 01, 2017; Cape Town; South Africa
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  • 18
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    In:  CASI
    Publication Date: 2019-07-13
    Description: No abstract available
    Keywords: Solar Physics
    Type: MSFC-E-DAA-TN45212 , Pre-Eclipse Talks at Magnolia Trace; Aug 27, 2017; Huntsville, AL; United States
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  • 19
    Publication Date: 2019-07-13
    Description: Particle radiation has significant effects for astronauts, satellites and planetary bodies throughout the Solar System. Acute space radiation hazards pose risks to human and robotic exploration. This radiation also naturally weathers the exposed surface regolith of the Moon, the two moons of Mars, and other airless bodies, and contributes to chemical evolution of planetary atmospheres at Earth, Mars, Venus, Titan, and Pluto. We provide a select review of recent areas of research covering the origin of SEPs from coronal mass ejections low in the corona, propagation of events through the solar system during the anomalously weak solar cycle 24 and important examples of radiation interactions for Earth, other planets and airless bodies such as the Moon.
    Keywords: Solar Physics
    Type: GSFC-E-DAA-TN51144 , Space Science Review (ISSN 0038-6308) (e-ISSN 1572-9672); 212; 4-Mar; 1069-1106
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  • 20
    Publication Date: 2019-07-13
    Description: Recent studies indicate that solar coronal jets result from eruption of small-scale filaments, or "minifilaments" (Sterling et al. 2015, Nature, 523, 437; Panesar et al. ApJL, 832L, 7). In many aspects, these coronal jets appear to be small-scale versions of long-recognized large-scale solar eruptions that are often accompanied by eruption of a large-scale filament and that produce solar flares and coronal mass ejections (CMEs). In coronal jets, a jet-base bright point (JBP) that is often observed to accompany the jet and that sits on the magnetic neutral line from which the minifilament erupts, corresponds to the solar flare of larger-scale eruptions that occurs at the neutral line from which the large-scale filament erupts. Large-scale eruptions are relatively uncommon (approximately 1 per day) and occur with relatively large-scale erupting filaments (approximately 10 (sup 5) kilometers long). Coronal jets are more common (approximately 100s per day), but occur from erupting minifilaments of smaller size (approximately 10 (sup 4) kilometers long). It is known that solar spicules are much more frequent (many millions per day) than coronal jets. Just as coronal jets are small-scale versions of large-scale eruptions, here we suggest that solar spicules might in turn be small-scale versions of coronal jets; we postulate that the spicules are produced by eruptions of "microfilaments" of length comparable to the width of observed spicules (approximately 300 kilometers). A plot of the estimated number of the three respective phenomena (flares/CMEs, coronal jets, and spicules) occurring on the Sun at a given time, against the average sizes of erupting filaments, minifilaments, and the putative microfilaments, results in a size distribution that can be fitted with a power-law within the estimated uncertainties. The counterparts of the flares of large-scale eruptions and the JBPs of jets might be weak, pervasive, transient brightenings observed in Hinode/CaII images, and the production of spicules by microfilament eruptions might explain why spicules spin, as do coronal jets. The expected small-scale neutral lines from which the microfilaments would be expected to erupt would be difficult to detect reliably with current instrumentation, but might be apparent with instrumentation of the near future. A full report on this work appears in Sterling and Moore 2016, ApJL, 829, L9.
    Keywords: Solar Physics
    Type: MSFC-E-DAA-TN50200 , AGU Fall Meeting 2017; Dec 11, 2017 - Dec 15, 2017; New Orleans, LA; United States
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  • 21
    Publication Date: 2019-07-13
    Description: Solar coronal jets are magnetically channeled eruptions that occur in all types of solar environments (e.g. active regions, quiet-Sun regions and coronal holes). Recent studies show that coronal jets are driven by the eruption of small-scare filaments (minifilaments). Once the eruption is underway magnetic reconnection evidently makes the jet spire and the bright emission in the jet base. However, the triggering mechanism of these eruptions and the formation mechanism of the pre-jet minifilaments are still open questions. In this talk, mainly using SDO/AIA (Solar Dynamics Observatory / Atmospheric Imaging Assembly) and SDO/HIM (Solar Dynamics Observatory / Helioseismic and Magnetic Imager) data, first I will address the question: what triggers the jet-driving minifilament eruptions in different solar environments (coronal holes, quiet regions, active regions)? Then I will talk about the magnetic field evolution that produces the pre-jet minifilaments. By examining pre-jet evolutionary changes in line-of-sight HMI magnetograms while examining concurrent EUV (Extreme Ultra-Violet) images of coronal and transition-region emission, we find clear evidence that flux cancelation is the main process that builds pre-jet minifilaments, and is also the main process that triggers the eruptions. I will also present results from our ongoing work indicating that jet-driving minifilament eruptions are analogous to larger-scare filament eruptions that make flares and CMEs (Coronal Mass Ejections). We find that persistent flux cancellation at the neutral line of large-scale filaments often triggers their eruptions. From our observations we infer that flux cancelation is the fundamental process from the buildup and triggering of solar eruptions of all sizes.
    Keywords: Solar Physics
    Type: MSFC-E-DAA-TN46932 , Stanford University Presentation; Oct 18, 2017; Stanford, CA; United States
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  • 22
    Publication Date: 2019-07-13
    Description: No abstract available
    Keywords: Solar Physics
    Type: MSFC-E-DAA-TN48725 , The National Society of Black Physicists Meeting (NSBP); Nov 03, 2017 - Nov 05, 2017; Atlanta, GA; United States
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  • 23
    Publication Date: 2019-07-13
    Description: No abstract available
    Keywords: Solar Physics
    Type: MSFC-E-DAA-TN45727 , Meeting of the AAS Solar Physics Division; Aug 21, 2017 - Aug 25, 2017; Portland, OR; United States
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  • 24
    Publication Date: 2019-07-13
    Description: Sequential chromospheric brightenings (SCBs) are often observed in the immediate vicinity of erupting flares and are associated with coronal mass ejections. Since their initial discovery in 2005, there have been several subsequent investigations of SCBs. These studies have used differing detection and analysis techniques, making it difficult to compare results between studies. This work employs the automated detection algorithm of Kirk et al. (Solar Phys. 283, 97, 2013) to extract the physical characteristics of SCBs in 11 flares of varying size and intensity. We demonstrate that the magnetic substructure within the SCB appears to have a significantly smaller area than the corresponding H(alpha) emission. We conclude that SCBs originate in the lower corona around 0.1 R above the photosphere, propagate away from the flare center at speeds of 35-85 km/s, and have peak photosphere magnetic intensities of 148+/- 2.9 G. In light of these measurements, we infer SCBs to be distinctive chromospheric signatures of erupting coronal mass ejections.
    Keywords: Solar Physics
    Type: GSFC-E-DAA-TN45650 , Solar Physics (ISSN 0038-0938) (e-ISSN 1573-093X); 292; 72
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  • 25
    Publication Date: 2019-07-13
    Description: We report on a new method to compute the flare reconnection (RC) flux from post-eruption arcades (PEAs) and the underlying photospheric magnetic fields. In previous works, the RC flux has been computed using the cumulative flare ribbon area. Here we obtain the RC flux as the flux in half of the area underlying the PEA in EUV imaged after the flare maximum. We apply this method to a set of 21 eruptions that originated near the solar disk center in Solar Cycle 23. We find that the RC flux from the arcade method ((Phi)rA) has excellent agreement with the flux from the flare-ribbon method ((Phi)rR) according to (Phi)rA = 1.24((Phi)rR)(sup 0.99). We also find (Phi)rA to be correlated with the poloidal flux ((Phi)P) of the associated magnetic cloud at 1 AU: (Phi)P = 1.20((Phi)rA)(sup 0.85). This relation is nearly identical to that obtained by Qiu et al. (Astrophys. J. 659, 758, 2007) using a set of only 9 eruptions. Our result supports the idea that flare reconnection results in the formation of the flux rope and PEA as a common process.
    Keywords: Solar Physics
    Type: GSFC-E-DAA-TN45734 , Solar Physics (ISSN 0038-0938) (e-ISSN 1573-093X); o 292; 65
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  • 26
    Publication Date: 2019-07-13
    Description: No abstract available
    Keywords: Solar Physics
    Type: MSFC-E-DAA-TN45694 , High-Resolution Solar Physics: Past, Present, Future NSO Workshop#30; Aug 07, 2017 - Aug 11, 2017; Sunspot, NM; United States
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  • 27
    Publication Date: 2019-07-13
    Description: A major remaining challenge for heliophysicsis to decipher the magnetic structure of the chromosphere, due to its "large role in defining how energy is transported into the corona and solar wind" (NASA's Heliophysics Roadmap). Recent observational advances enabled by the Interface Region Imaging Spectrometer (IRIS) have revolutionized our view of the critical role this highly dynamic interface between the photosphere and corona plays in energizing and structuring the outer solar atmosphere. Despite these advances, a major impediment to better understanding the solar atmosphere is our lack of empirical knowledge regarding the direction and strength of the magnetic field in the upper chromosphere. Such measurements are crucial to address several major unresolved issues in solar physics: for example, to constrain the energy flux carried by the Alfven waves propagating through the chromosphere (De Pontieuet al., 2014), and to determine the height at which the plasma Beta = 1 transition occurs, which has important consequences for the braiding of magnetic fields (Cirtainet al., 2013; Guerreiroet al., 2014), for propagation and mode conversion of waves (Tian et al., 2014a; Straus et al., 2008) and for non-linear force-free extrapolation methods that are key to determining what drives instabilities such as flares or coronal mass ejections (e.g.,De Rosa et al., 2009). The most reliable method used to determine the solar magnetic field vector is the observation and interpretation of polarization signals in spectral lines, associated with the Zeeman and Hanle effects. Magnetically sensitive ultraviolet spectral lines formed in the upper chromosphere and transition region provide a powerful tool with which to probe this key boundary region (e.g., Trujillo Bueno, 2014). Probing the magnetic nature of the chromosphere requires measurement of the Stokes I, Q, U and V profiles of the relevant spectral lines (of which Q, U and V encode the magnetic field information).
    Keywords: Solar Physics
    Type: MSFC-E-DAA-TN44623 , Solar Heliospheric and Interplanetary Environment (SHINE) Conference 2017; Jul 24, 2017 - Jul 28, 2017; Saint-Sauveur, Quebec; Canada
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  • 28
    Publication Date: 2019-07-13
    Description: The four Magnetospheric Multiscale (MMS) spacecraft observed a 1 min burst of energetic ions (501000 keV) in the region upstream from the subsolar quasi-perpendicular bow shock on 6 December 2015. The composition, flux levels, and spectral indices of these energetic protons, helium, and oxygen ions greatly resemble those seen in the outer magnetosphere earlier while MMS crossed the magnetopause and differ significantly from those simultaneously observed far upstream by Advanced Composition Explorer (ACE). However, the event cannot be explained solely in terms of leakage from the magnetosphere. The strongly southward orientation of the interplanetary magnetic field (IMF) lines at the time of the event precludes any connection to the magnetosphere. This point is confirmed by the presence of energetic electrons, known to occur on magnetic field lines that graze the bow shock rather than connect to the magnetosphere. We suggest that the ions gradient drifted out of the nearby quasi-parallel foreshock and into the quasi-perpendicular bow shock. Each of the ion species exhibited an inverse energy dispersion. As predicted by models for shock drift acceleration, the energies of the ions increased as (sub Bn), the angle between the IMF and the shock normal, increased. Finally, we note that a similar event was observed a few minutes later in the subsolar magnetosheath, indicating that such events can be swept downstream of the bow shock.
    Keywords: Solar Physics
    Type: GSFC-E-DAA-TN64900 , GSFC-E-DAA-TN63349 , Journal of Geophysical Research: Space Physics (ISSN 2169-9402) (e-ISSN 2169-9380); 122; 3; 3232-3246
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  • 29
    Publication Date: 2019-07-13
    Description: No abstract available
    Keywords: Solar Physics
    Type: ARC-E-DAA-TN48791 , Radiation Characterization from Earth to Moon, Mars, and Beyond; Nov 06, 2017 - Nov 08, 2017; Moffett Field, CA; United States
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  • 30
    Publication Date: 2019-07-13
    Description: Hard X-ray (HXR) spectral breaks are explained in terms of a one-dimensional model with a cospatial return current. We study 19 flares observed by the Ramaty High Energy Solar Spectroscopic Imager with strong spectral breaks at energies around a few deka-keV, which cannot be explained by isotropic albedo or non-uniform ionization alone. We identify these breaks at the HXR peak time, but we obtain 8 s cadence spectra of the entire impulsive phase. Electrons with an initially power-law distribution and a sharp low-energy cutoff lose energy through return-current losses until they reach the thick target, where they lose their remaining energy through collisions. Our main results are as follows. (1) The return-current collisional thick-target model provides acceptable fits for spectra with strong breaks. (2) Limits on the plasma resistivity are derived from the fitted potential drop and deduced electron-beam flux density, assuming the return current is a drift current in the ambient plasma. These resistivities are typically 2-3 orders of magnitude higher than the Spitzer resistivity at the fitted temperature, and provide a test for the adequacy of classical resistivity and the stability of the return current. (3) Using the upper limit of the low-energy cutoff, the return current is always stable to the generation of ion-acoustic and electrostatic ion-cyclotron instabilities when the electron temperature is nine times lower than the ion temperature. (4) In most cases, the return current is most likely primarily carried by runaway electrons from the tail of the thermal distribution rather than by the bulk drifting thermal electrons. For these cases, anomalous resistivity is not required.
    Keywords: Solar Physics
    Type: GSFC-E-DAA-TN51690 , Astrophysical Journal (ISSN 0004-637X) (e-ISSN 1538-4357); 851; 2; 78
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  • 31
    Publication Date: 2019-07-13
    Description: Solar coronal jets are magnetically channeled eruptions that occur in all types of solar environments (e.g. active regions, quiet-Sun regions and coronal holes). Recent studies show that coronal jets are driven by the eruption of small-scale filaments (minifilaments). Once the eruption is underway magnetic reconnection evidently makes the jet spire and the bright emission in the jet base. However, the triggering mechanism of these eruptions and the formation mechanism of the pre-jet minifilaments are still open questions. In this talk, mainly using SDO/AIA and SDO/HMI data, first I will address the question: what triggers the jet-driving minifilament eruptions in different solar environments (coronal holes, quiet regions, active regions)? Then I will talk about the magnetic field evolution that produces the pre-jet minifilaments. By examining pre-jet evolutionary changes in line-of-sight HMI magnetograms while examining concurrent EUV images of coronal and transition-region emission, we find clear evidence that flux cancellation is the main process that builds pre-jet minifilaments, and is also the main process that triggers the eruptions. I will also present results from our ongoing work indicating that jet-driving minifilament eruptions are analogous to larger-scale filament eruptions that make flares and CMEs. We find that persistent flux cancellation at the neutral line of large-scale filaments often triggers their eruptions. From our observations we infer that flux cancellation is the fundamental process for the buildup and triggering of solar eruptions of all sizes.
    Keywords: Solar Physics
    Type: MSFC-E-DAA-TN47730 , Seminar at University of California Berkeley; Oct 17, 2017; Berkeley, CA; United States
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  • 32
    Publication Date: 2019-07-13
    Description: No abstract available
    Keywords: Solar Physics
    Type: MSFC-E-DAA-TN47229 , Parker Solar Probe SWG Meeting; Oct 02, 2017 - Oct 06, 2017; Laurel, MD; United States
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  • 33
    Publication Date: 2019-07-13
    Description: No abstract available
    Keywords: Solar Physics
    Type: MSFC-E-DAA-TN45970 , Solar ECLIPSE Talk; Aug 19, 2017; Tullahoma, TN; United States
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  • 34
    Publication Date: 2019-07-13
    Description: Magnetically driven eruptions on the Sun, from stellar-scale coronal mass ejections1 to small-scale coronal X-ray and extreme-ultraviolet jets, have frequently been observed to involve the ejection of the highly stressed magnetic flux of a filament. Theoretically, these two phenomena have been thought to arise through very different mechanisms: coronal mass ejections from an ideal (non-dissipative) process, whereby the energy release does not require a change in the magnetic topology, as in the kink or torus instability; and coronal jets from a resistive process, involving magnetic reconnection. However, it was recently concluded from new observations that all coronal jets are driven by filament ejection, just like large mass ejections. This suggests that the two phenomena have physically identical origin and hence that a single mechanism may be responsible, that is, either mass ejections arise from reconnection, or jets arise from an ideal instability. Here we report simulations of a coronal jet driven by filament ejection, whereby a region of highly sheared magnetic field near the solar surface becomes unstable and erupts. The results show that magnetic reconnection causes the energy release via 'magnetic breakout', a positive feedback mechanism between filament ejection and reconnection. We conclude that if coronal mass ejections and jets are indeed of physically identical origin (although on different spatial scales) then magnetic reconnection (rather than an ideal process) must also underlie mass ejections, and that magnetic breakout is a universal model for solar eruptions.
    Keywords: Solar Physics
    Type: GSFC-E-DAA-TN45550 , Nature International Weekly Journal of Science (ISSN 0028-0836) (e-ISSN 1476-4687); 544; 7651; 452-455
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  • 35
    facet.materialart.
    Unknown
    In:  CASI
    Publication Date: 2019-07-13
    Description: No abstract available
    Keywords: Solar Physics
    Type: MSFC-E-DAA-TN45482 , Rotary Club of Tullahoma; Aug 04, 2017; Tullahoma, TN; United States
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  • 36
    Publication Date: 2019-07-13
    Description: Observational signatures of reconnection have been studied extensively in the lower corona for decades, successfully providing insight into energy release mechanisms in the region above post-flare arcade loops and below 1.5 solar radii. During large eruptive events, however, energy release continues to occur well beyond the presence of reconnection signatures at these low heights. Supra-Arcade Downflows (SADs) and Supra-Arcade Downflowing Loops (SADLs) are particularly useful measures of continual reconnection in the corona as they may indicate the presence and path of retracting post-reconnection loops. SADs and SADLs have been faintly observed up to 18 hours beyond the passage of corona mass ejections through the SOHO/LASCO field of view, but a recent event from 2014 October 14 associated with giant arches provides very clear observations of these downflows for days after the initial eruption. We report on this unique event and compare these findings with observational signatures of magnetic reconnection in the extended corona for more typical eruptions.
    Keywords: Solar Physics
    Type: MSFC-E-DAA-TN42749 , SHINE Conference 2017; Jul 24, 2017 - Jul 28, 2017; Saint-Sauveur, Quebec; Canada
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  • 37
    Publication Date: 2019-07-13
    Description: COSIE is a solar-observing instrument (currently proposed for mounting onto the ISS) which obtains wide field images of the corona and full Sun spectral images with high sensitivity and rapid cadence. The primary purpose of the instrument is to constrain the global field topology and to track coronal mass ejections from the disk through the inner heliosphere.
    Keywords: Solar Physics
    Type: MSFC-E-DAA-TN44792 , IAU 335: Space Weather of the Heliosphere: Processes and Forecasts; Jul 17, 2017 - Jul 21, 2017; Exeter; United Kingdom
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  • 38
    Publication Date: 2019-07-13
    Description: Recent investigations show that coronal jets are driven by the eruption of a small-scale filament (10,000 - 20,000 km long, called a minifilament) following magnetic flux cancelation at the neutral line underneath the minifilament. Minifilament eruptions appear to be analogous to larger-scale solar filament eruptions: they both reside, before the eruption, in the highly sheared field between the adjacent opposite-polarity magnetic flux patches (neutral line); jet-producing minifilament and larger-scale solar filament first show a slow-rise, followed by a fast-rise as they erupt; during the jet-producing minifilament eruption a jet bright point (JBP) appears at the location where the minifilament was rooted before the eruption, analogous to the situation with CME-producing larger-scale filament eruptions where a solar flare arcade forms during the filament eruption along the neutral line along which the filament resided prior to its eruption. In the present study we investigate the triggering mechanism of CME-producing large solar filament eruptions, and find that enduring flux cancelation at the neutral line of the filaments often triggers their eruptions. This corresponds to the finding that persistent flux cancelation at the neutral is the cause of jet-producing minifilament eruptions. Thus our observations support coronal jets being miniature version of CMEs.
    Keywords: Solar Physics
    Type: MSFC-E-DAA-TN44663 , SHINE Conference 2017; Jul 24, 2017 - Jul 28, 2017; Saint-Sauveur, Quebec; Canada
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  • 39
    facet.materialart.
    Unknown
    In:  CASI
    Publication Date: 2019-07-27
    Description: No abstract available
    Keywords: Solar Physics
    Type: MSFC-E-DAA-TN40440 , University Colloquium and Public Talk; 21/Mar. 2017; Oxford, MS; United States
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  • 40
    Publication Date: 2019-08-13
    Description: We report on further evidence that solar energetic particles are organized by the kinematic properties of coronal mass ejections (CMEs). In particular, we focus on the starting frequency of type II bursts, which is related to the distance from the Sun where the radio emission starts. We find that the three groups of solar energetic particle (SEP) events known to have distinct values of CME initial acceleration, also have distinct average starting frequencies of the associated type II bursts. SEP events with ground level enhancement (GLE) have the highest starting frequency (107 MHz), while those associated with filament eruption (FE) in quiescent regions have the lowest starting frequency (22 MHz); regular SEP events have intermediate starting frequency (81 MHz). Taking the onset time of type II bursts as the time of shock formation, we determine the shock formation heights measured from the Sun center. We find that the shocks form on average closest to the Sun (1.51 Rs) in GLE events, farthest from the Sun in FE SEP events (5.38 Rs), and at intermediate distances in regular SEP events (1.72 Rs). Finally, we present the results of a case study of a CME with high initial acceleration (approx. 3 km s-2) and a type II radio burst with high starting frequency (~200 MHz) but associated with a minor SEP event. We find that the relation between the fluence spectral index and CME initial acceleration continues to hold even for this minor SEP event.
    Keywords: Solar Physics
    Type: GSFC-E-DAA-TN51106 , Annual International Astrophysics Conference; Mar 06, 2017 - Mar 10, 2017; Santa Fe, NM; United States|Journal of Physics: Conference Series (ISSN 1742-6588) (e-ISSN 1742-6596); 900; 1; 012009
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  • 41
    Publication Date: 2019-08-13
    Description: High voltage solar array interactions with the space environment can have a significant impact on array performance and spacecraft charging. Over the past 10 years, data from the International Space Station has allowed for detailed observations of these interactions over long periods of time. Some of the surprising observations have been floating potential transients, which were not expected and are not reproduced by existing models. In order to understand the underlying processes producing these transients, the temporal evolution of the plasma sheath surrounding the solar cells in low Earth orbit is being investigated. This study includes lumped element modeling and particle-in-cell simulation methods. This presentation will focus on recent results from the on-going investigations.
    Keywords: Solar Physics
    Type: M17-5871 , Applied Space Environments Conference 2017; May 15, 2017 - May 19, 2017; Huntsville, AL; United States
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  • 42
    Publication Date: 2019-08-13
    Description: The Natural Environments Branch of the Engineering Directorate at Marshall Space Flight Center (MSFC) provides solar cycle forecasts for NASA space flight programs and the aerospace community. These forecasts provide future statistical estimates of sunspot number, solar radio 10.7 cm flux (F10.7), and the geomagnetic planetary index, Ap, for input to various space environment models. For example, many thermosphere density computer models used in spacecraft operations, orbital lifetime analysis, and the planning of future spacecraft missions require as inputs the F10.7 and Ap. The solar forecast is updated each month by executing MSAFE using historical and the latest month's observed solar indices to provide estimates for the balance of the current solar cycle. The forecasted solar indices represent the 13-month smoothed values consisting of a best estimate value stated as a 50 percentile value along with approximate +/- 2 sigma values stated as 95 and 5 percentile statistical values. This presentation will give an overview of the MSAFE model and the forecast for the current solar cycle.
    Keywords: Solar Physics
    Type: M17-5882 , Applied Space Environments Conference (ASEC) 2017; May 15, 2017 - May 19, 2017; Huntsville, AL; United States
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  • 43
    Publication Date: 2019-08-13
    Description: A data driven, near photospheric, 3 D, non-force free magnetohydrodynamic model predicts time series of the complete current density, and the resistive heating rate Q at the photosphere in neutral line regions (NLRs) of 14 active regions (ARs). The model is driven by time series of the magnetic field B observed by the Helioseismic and Magnetic Imager on the Solar Dynamics Observatory (SDO) satellite. Spurious Doppler periods due to SDO orbital motion are filtered out of the time series for B in every AR pixel. Errors in B due to these periods can be significant. The number of occurrences N(q) of values of Q 〉 or = q for each AR time series is found to be a scale invariant power law distribution, N(Q) / Qs, above an AR dependent threshold value of Q, where 0.3952 〈 or = s 〈 or = 0.5298 with mean and standard deviation of 0.4678 and 0.0454, indicating little variation between ARs. Observations show that the number of occurrences N(E) of coronal flares with a total energy released 〉 or = E obeys the same type of distribution, N(E) / ES, above an AR dependent threshold value of E, with 0.38 〈 or approx. S 〈 or approx. 0.60, also with little variation among ARs. Within error margins the ranges of s and S are nearly identical. This strong similarity between N(Q) and N(E) suggests a fundamental connection between the process that drives coronal flares and the process that drives photospheric NLR heating rates in ARs. In addition, results suggest it is plausible that spikes in Q, several orders of magnitude above background values, are correlated with times of the subsequent occurrence of M or X flares.
    Keywords: Solar Physics
    Type: M17-5865 , Applied Space Environments Conference 2017; May 15, 2017 - May 19, 2017; Huntsville, AL; United States
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  • 44
    Publication Date: 2019-08-13
    Description: The magnetic storm that commenced on June 22, 2015 was one of the largest storms in the current solar cycle. During this event, ionospheric F-region density measurements from the Floating Potential Measurement Unit (FPMU) on board the International Space Station (ISS) show dramatic depletions in the post-sunset (nighttime) local time sector at equatorial latitudes starting in the main phase of the storm and persisting on several subsequent orbits into the next day. Putting these low-latitude measurements in context with the global dynamics of the storm, we will present results from simulations and observations in our efforts to better understand the effects of this storm on the different regions of the coupled ionosphere-magnetosphere. The consequences of the magnetospheric penetration electric field and their role in the occurrence of these equatorial spread F observations will be investigated through the results of the SAMI3-RCM numerical model, a coupled ionosphere-magnetosphere model with self-consistent large-scale electrodynamics. Specifically, we will investigate the transient signatures of the interplanetary magnetic field component, Bz, and its role in driving the global convection electric field and ionospheric density redistribution. Lastly, measurements from the AMPERE Birkeland currents, DMSP drift velocities and the particle flux dropouts observed from the Magnetospheric Multiscale Mission (MMS) will be correlated with the FPMU density depletions and each other. Together these observations and simulation results will be assembled to provide each region's context to the global dynamics and time evolution of the storm.
    Keywords: Solar Physics
    Type: M17-5905 , Applied Space Environments Conference (ASEC) 2017; May 15, 2017 - May 19, 2017; Huntsville, AL; United States
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  • 45
    Publication Date: 2019-08-13
    Description: The Lightweight Integrated Solar Array and Transceiver (LISA-T) experiment consists of thin-film, low mass, low volume solar panels. Given the variety of thin solar cells and cover materials and the lack of environmental protection typically afforded by thick coverglasses, a series of tests were conducted in Marshall Space Flight Center's Space Environmental Effects Facility to evaluate the performance of these materials. Candidate thin polymeric films and nitinol wires used for deployment were also exposed. Simulated space environment exposures were selected based on SSP 30425 rev. B, "Space Station Program Natural Environment Definition for Design" or AIAA Standard S-111A-2014, "Qualification and Quality Requirements for Space Solar Cells." One set of candidate materials were exposed to 5 eV atomic oxygen and concurrent vacuum ultraviolet (VUV) radiation for low Earth orbit simulation. A second set of materials were exposed to 1 MeV electrons. A third set of samples were exposed to 50, 100, 500, and 700 keV energy protons, and a fourth set were exposed to 〉2,000 hours of near ultraviolet (NUV) radiation. A final set was rapidly thermal cycled between -55 and +125degC. This test series provides data on enhanced power generation, particularly for small satellites with reduced mass and volume resources. Performance versus mass and cost per Watt is discussed.
    Keywords: Solar Physics
    Type: M17-5996 , Applied Space Environments Conference 2017; May 15, 2017 - May 19, 2017; Huntsville, AL; United States
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  • 46
    facet.materialart.
    Unknown
    In:  CASI
    Publication Date: 2019-08-13
    Description: No abstract available
    Keywords: Solar Physics
    Type: MSFC-E-DAA-TN45940 , MSFC-E-DAA-TN45941 , MSFC-E-DAA-TN45996 , MSFC-E-DAA-TN45997 , Presentation at Blossomwood Middle School; Aug 15, 2017; Huntsville, AL; United States|Presentation at Holy Family Catholic School; Aug 15, 2017; Huntsville, AL; United States|Country Day School Presentation; Aug 15, 2017; Huntsville, AL; United States|Presentation at Academy for Academics and Art; Aug 15, 2017; Huntsville, AL; United States
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  • 47
    Publication Date: 2019-08-13
    Description: The magnetic storm that commenced on June 22, 2015 was one of the largest storms in the current solar cycle, resulting from an active region on the Sun that produced numerous coronal mass ejections (CMEs) and associated interplanetary shock waves. On June 22 at 18:36 UT the magnetosphere was impacted by the leading-edge shock wave and a sheath carrying a large and highly variable interplanetary magnetic field (IMF) Bz with values ranging from +25 to -40 nT. During the subsequent interval from 0000 to 0800 UT, there was a second intensification of the geomagnetic storm resulting from the impact of the CME. We present dramatic responses of simultaneous particle measurements from the high-altitude Magnetospheric Multiscale Mission (MMS) at high altitudes in the magnetosphere (approx. 9-12 Re) and from the low-altitude (F-region) Floating Potential Measurement Unit (FPMU) on board the International Space Station (ISS). We analyze potential causes of these dramatic particle flux dropouts by putting them in the context of storm-time electrodynamics, and support our results with numerical simulations of the global magnetosphere and ionosphere. During the sheath phase of the storm, the MMS spacecraft in the near-earth equatorial plane observed a rapid reconfiguration of the magnetic field near 1923 UT. Initially in the warm plasma sheet, particle flux dropouts were observed as they tracked the plasma-sheet to lobe transitions with the stretching and thinning of the plasma sheet. Anti-sunward flowing O+ ions of ionospheric origin were also measured during this period, confirming that the MMS spacecraft temporarily was in a lobe.
    Keywords: Solar Physics
    Type: M17-6049 , Applied Space Environments Conference (ASEC) 2017; May 15, 2017 - May 19, 2017; Huntsville, AL; United States
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  • 48
    facet.materialart.
    Unknown
    In:  CASI
    Publication Date: 2019-08-13
    Description: No abstract available
    Keywords: Solar Physics
    Type: MSFC-E-DAA-TN45208 , Pre-Eclipse Talks at the USSRC; Jul 27, 2017; Huntsville, AL; United States
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  • 49
    Publication Date: 2019-08-13
    Description: The Lightweight Integrated Solar Array and Transceiver (LISA-T) experiment consists of thin-film, low mass, low volume solar panels. Given the variety of thin solar cells and cover materials and the lack of environmental protection afforded by typical thick coverglasses, a series of tests were conducted in Marshall Space Flight Center's Space Environmental Effects Facility to evaluate the performance of these materials. Candidate thin polymeric films and nitinol wires used for deployment were also exposed. Simulated space environment exposures were selected based on SSP 30425 rev. B, "Space Station Program Natural Environment Definition for Design" or AIAA Standard S-111A-2014, "Qualification and Quality Requirements for Space Solar Cells." One set of candidate materials were exposed to 5 eV atomic oxygen and concurrent vacuum ultraviolet (VUV) radiation for low Earth orbit simulation. A second set of materials were exposed to 1 MeV electrons. A third set of samples were exposed to 50, 500, and 750 keV energy protons, and a fourth set were exposed to 〉2,000 hours of ultraviolet radiation. A final set was rapidly thermal cycled between -50 and +120 C. This test series provides data on enhanced power generation, particularly for small satellites with reduced mass and volume resources. Performance versus mass and cost per Watt is discussed.
    Keywords: Solar Physics
    Type: M17-5853 , Applied Space Environments Conference 2017; May 15, 2017 - May 17, 2017; Huntsville, AL; United States
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  • 50
    Publication Date: 2019-08-13
    Description: High voltage solar array interactions with the space environment can have a significant impact on array performance and spacecraft charging. Over the past 10 years, data from the International Space Station has allowed for detailed observations of these interactions over long periods of time. Some of the surprising observations have been floating potential transients, which were not expected and are not reproduced by existing models. In order to understand the underlying processes producing these transients, the temporal evolution of the plasma sheath surrounding the solar cells in low Earth orbit is being investigated. This study includes lumped element modeling and particle-in-cell simulation methods. This presentation will focus on recent results from the on-going investigations.
    Keywords: Solar Physics
    Type: M17-5871 , Applied Space Environments Conference 2017; May 15, 2017 - May 19, 2017; Huntsville, AL; United States
    Format: application/pdf
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  • 51
    Publication Date: 2019-08-13
    Description: The Natural Environments Branch of the Engineering Directorate at Marshall Space Flight Center (MSFC) provides solar cycle forecasts for NASA space flight programs and the aerospace community. These forecasts provide future statistical estimates of sunspot number, solar radio 10.7 cm flux (F10.7), and the geomagnetic planetary index, Ap, for input to various space environment models. For example, many thermosphere density computer models used in spacecraft operations, orbital lifetime analysis, and the planning of future spacecraft missions require as inputs the F10.7 and Ap. The solar forecast is updated each month by executing MSAFE using historical and the latest month's observed solar indices to provide estimates for the balance of the current solar cycle. The forecasted solar indices represent the 13-month smoothed values consisting of a best estimate value stated as a 50 percentile value along with approximate +/- 2 sigma values stated as 95 and 5 percentile statistical values. This presentation will give an overview of the MSAFE model and the forecast for the current solar cycle.
    Keywords: Solar Physics
    Type: M17-5882 , Applied Space Environments Conference (ASEC) 2017; May 15, 2017 - May 19, 2017; Huntsville, AL; United States
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  • 52
    Publication Date: 2019-08-13
    Description: No abstract available
    Keywords: Solar Physics
    Type: M17-5980 , Applied Space Environments Conference; 15-19 May 2017; Huntsville, AL; United States
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  • 53
    Publication Date: 2019-08-13
    Description: The magnetic storm that commenced on June 22, 2015 was one of the largest storms in the current solar cycle. During this event, ionospheric F-region density measurements from the Floating Potential Measurement Unit (FPMU) on board the International Space Station (ISS) show dramatic depletions in the post-sunset (nighttime) local time sector at equatorial latitudes starting in the main phase of the storm and persisting on several subsequent orbits into the next day. Putting these low-latitude measurements in context with the global dynamics of the storm, we will present results from simulations and observations in our efforts to better understand the effects of this storm on the different regions of the coupled ionosphere-magnetosphere. The consequences of the magnetospheric penetration electric field and their role in the occurrence of these equatorial spread F observations will be investigated through the results of the SAMI3-RCM numerical model, a coupled ionosphere-magnetosphere model with self-consistent large-scale electrodynamics. Specifically, we will investigate the transient signatures of the interplanetary magnetic field component, Bz, and its role in driving the global convection electric field and ionospheric density redistribution. Lastly, measurements from the AMPERE Birkeland currents, DMSP drift velocities and the particle flux dropouts observed from the Magnetospheric Multiscale Mission (MMS) will be correlated with the FPMU density depletions and each other. Together these observations and simulation results will be assembled to provide each regions context to the global dynamics and time evolution of the storm.
    Keywords: Solar Physics
    Type: M17-5905 , Applied Space Environments Conference (ASEC) 2017; May 15, 2017 - May 19, 2017; Huntsville, AL; United States
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  • 54
    Publication Date: 2019-08-13
    Description: No abstract available
    Keywords: Solar Physics
    Type: M17-6001 , Applied Space Environments Conference (ASEC); May 15, 2017 - May 19, 2017; Huntsville, AL; United States
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  • 55
    Publication Date: 2019-08-13
    Description: The Lightweight Integrated Solar Array and Transceiver (LISA-T) experiment consists of thin-film, low mass, low volume solar panels. Given the variety of thin solar cells and cover materials and the lack of environmental protection typically afforded by thick coverglasses, a series of tests were conducted in Marshall Space Flight Center's Space Environmental Effects Facility to evaluate the performance of these materials. Candidate thin polymeric films and nitinol wires used for deployment were also exposed. Simulated space environment exposures were selected based on SSP 30425 rev. B, "Space Station Program Natural Environment Definition for Design" or AIAA Standard S-111A-2014, "Qualification and Quality Requirements for Space Solar Cells." One set of candidate materials were exposed to 5 eV atomic oxygen and concurrent vacuum ultraviolet (VUV) radiation for low Earth orbit simulation. A second set of materials were exposed to 1 MeV electrons. A third set of samples were exposed to 50, 100, 500, and 700 keV energy protons, and a fourth set were exposed to 〉2,000 hours of near ultraviolet (NUV) radiation. A final set was rapidly thermal cycled between -55 and +125 C. This test series provides data on enhanced power generation, particularly for small satellites with reduced mass and volume resources. Performance versus mass and cost per Watt is discussed.
    Keywords: Solar Physics
    Type: M17-5996 , Applied Space Environments Conference 2017; May 15, 2017 - May 19, 2017; Huntsville, AL; United States
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  • 56
    Publication Date: 2019-08-13
    Description: Initial results from the PIC simulation and the LEM simulation have been presented. The PIC simulation results show that more detailed study is required to refine the ISS solar array current collection model and to understand the development of the current collection in time. The initial results from the LEM demonstrate that is it possible the transients are caused by solar array interaction with the environment, but there are presently too many assumptions in the model to be certain. Continued work on the PIC simulation will provide valuable information on the development of the barrier potential, which will allow refinement the LEM simulation and a better understanding of the causes and effects of the transients.
    Keywords: Solar Physics
    Type: M17-6018 , Applied Space Environments Conference; May 15, 2017 - May 19, 2017; Huntsville, AL; United States
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  • 57
    Publication Date: 2019-08-13
    Description: The MSAFE model provides forecasts for the solar indices SSN, F10.7, and Ap. These solar indices are used as inputs to many space environment models used in orbital spacecraft operations and space mission analysis. Forecasts from the MSAFE model are provided on the MSFC Natural Environments Branch's solar webpage and are updated as new monthly observations come available. The MSAFE prediction routine employs a statistical technique that calculates deviations of past solar cycles from the mean cycle and performs a regression analysis to predict the deviation from the mean cycle of the solar index at the next future time interval. The prediction algorithm is applied recursively to produce monthly smoothed solar index values for the remaining of the cycle. The forecasts are initiated for a given cycle after about 8 to 12 months of observations are collected. A forecast made at the beginning of cycle 24 using the MSAFE program captured the cycle fairly well with some difficulty in discerning the double peak that occurred at solar cycle maximum.
    Keywords: Solar Physics
    Type: M17-6038 , The Applied Space Environments Conference; May 15, 2017 - May 19, 2017; Huntsville, AL; United States
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  • 58
    Publication Date: 2019-08-13
    Description: The MSAFE model provides forecasts for the solar indices SSN, F10.7, and Ap. These solar indices are used as inputs to space environment models used in orbital spacecraft operations and space mission analysis. Forecasts from the MSAFE model are provided on the MSFC Natural Environments Branch's solar web page and are updated as new monthly observations become available. The MSAFE prediction routine employs a statistical technique that calculates deviations of past solar cycles from the mean cycle and performs a regression analysis to calculate the deviation from the mean cycle of the solar index at the next future time interval. The forecasts are initiated for a given cycle after about 8 to 9 monthly observations from the start of the cycle are collected. A forecast made at the beginning of cycle 24 using the MSAFE program captured the cycle fairly well with some difficulty in discerning the double peak that occurred at solar cycle maximum.
    Keywords: Solar Physics
    Type: M17-6043 , The Applied Space Environments Conference; May 15, 2017 - May 19, 2017; Huntsville, AL; United States
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  • 59
    Publication Date: 2019-08-13
    Description: No abstract available
    Keywords: Solar Physics
    Type: MSFC-E-DAA-TN42701 , Applied Space Environments Conference 2017; May 15, 2017 - May 19, 2017; Huntsville AL; United States
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  • 60
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    In:  CASI
    Publication Date: 2019-08-13
    Description: No abstract available
    Keywords: Solar Physics
    Type: MSFC-E-DAA-TN39381 , Teacher Workshop at The Canyon Center; Feb 17, 2017; Fort Payne, AL; United States
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  • 61
    Publication Date: 2019-08-13
    Description: NASA's Marshall Space Flight Center (MSFC) is partnering with the U.S. Space and Rocket Center (USSRC), and Austin Peay State University (APSU) to engage citizen scientists, engineers, and students in science investigations during the 2017 American Solar Eclipse. Investigations will support the Citizen Continental America Telescopic Eclipse (CATE), Ham Radio Science Citizen Investigation(HamSCI), and Interactive NASA Space Physics Ionosphere Radio Experiments (INSPIRE). All planned activities will engage Space Campers and local high school students in the application of the scientific method as they seek to explore a wide range of observations during the eclipse. Where planned experiments touch on current scientific questions, the camper/students will be acting as citizen scientists, participating with researchers from APSU and MSFC. Participants will test their expectations and after the eclipse, share their results, experiences, and conclusions to younger Space Campers at the US Space & Rocket Center.
    Keywords: Solar Physics
    Type: MSFC-E-DAA-TN42296 , Space Weather Workshop 2017; May 01, 2017 - May 05, 2017; Broomfield, CO; United States
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  • 62
    Publication Date: 2019-08-13
    Description: The magnetic storm that commenced on June 22-23, 2015 was one of the largest storms in our current solar cycle, resulting from an active region on the Sun that produced numerous coronal mass ejections (CMEs) and associated interplanetary shock waves. On June 22 at 18:36 UT the magnetosphere was impacted by the shock wave on the magnetosphere. Observations from several spacecraft observed the dynamic response of the magnetosphere and ionosphere. MMS observatories in the near earth tail These low altitude measurements are correlated in the magnetosphere with particle flux dropouts measured by MMS We follow the timing of this storm in the ionosphere with the density depletions throughout the ISS orbits, DMSP drift velocities, and enhanced AMPERE Birkland currents. Together these observations and simulation results will be assembled to provide each region's context to the global dynamics and time evolution of the storm. The models during these event support and flesh out the puzzle of the global dynamics.
    Keywords: Solar Physics
    Type: M17-6048 , Applied Space Environments Conference (ASEC) 2017; May 15, 2017 - May 19, 2017; Huntsville, AL; United States
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  • 63
    Publication Date: 2019-08-13
    Description: The magnetic storm that commenced on June 22, 2015 was one of the largest storms in the current solar cycle, resulting from an active region on the Sun that produced numerous coronal mass ejections (CMEs) and associated interplanetary shock waves. On June 22 at 18:36 UT the magnetosphere was impacted by the leading-edge shock wave and a sheath carrying a large and highly variable interplanetary magnetic field (IMF) Bz with values ranging from +25 to -40 nT. During the subsequent interval from 0000 to 0800 UT, there was a second intensification of the geomagnetic storm resulting from the impact of the CME. We present dramatic responses of simultaneous particle measurements from the high-altitude Magnetospheric Multiscale Mission (MMS) at high altitudes in the magnetosphere (approx. 9-12 Re) and from the low-altitude (F-region) Floating Potential Measurement Unit (FPMU) on board the International Space Station (ISS). We analyze potential causes of these dramatic particle flux dropouts by putting them in the context of storm-time electrodynamics, and support our results with numerical simulations of the global magnetosphere and ionosphere. During the sheath phase of the storm, the MMS spacecraft in the near-earth equatorial plane observed a rapid reconfiguration of the magnetic field near 1923 UT. Initially in the warm plasmasheet, particle flux dropouts were observed as they tracked the plasma-sheet to lobe transitions with the stretching and thinning of the plasmasheet. Anti-sunward flowing O+ ions of ionospheric origin were also measured during this period, confirming that the MMS spacecraft temporarily was in a lobe.
    Keywords: Solar Physics
    Type: M17-6049 , Applied Space Environments Conference (ASEC) 2017; May 15, 2017 - May 19, 2017; Huntsville, AL; United States
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  • 64
    Publication Date: 2019-08-07
    Description: Stochastic nature of solar activity variations together with our limited knowledge of the dynamo mechanism and subsurface dynamics causes uncertainty in predictions of the solar cycle. For improving the physics-based predictions we can take advantage of the mathematical data assimilation approach that allows us to take into account both, observational errors and model uncertainties, and provide estimates of the next solar cycle along with prediction uncertainties. In this study we use the Parker's migratory dynamo model together with the equation of magnetic helicity balance, which reproduces main properties of the sunspot cycles and allow us to minimize discrepancies between the observed global activity variations and the model solution. The test simulation runs show that a reliable prediction can be obtained for two phases of preceding solar cycle: 1) if the polar field reversals shortly after the solar maxima (strong toroidal field and weak poloidal field), and 2) during the solar minima (strongest poloidal and weak toroidal fields). The early estimate of Cycle 25 obtained by this method shows that this cycle will start in 2019 2020, reach the maximum in 2023 2024, and that the mean sunspot number at the maximum will be about 90 (for the v2.0 sunspot number series).
    Keywords: Solar Physics
    Type: ARC-E-DAA-TN44797 , Meeting of the AAS Solar Physics Division; Aug 21, 2017 - Aug 25, 2017; Portland, OR; United States
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  • 65
    Publication Date: 2019-08-13
    Description: No abstract available
    Keywords: Solar Physics
    Type: MSFC-E-DAA-TN42870 , Hinode Science Meeting 2017; May 30, 2017 - Jun 02, 2017; Seattle, WA; United States|IRIS Science Meeting 2017; May 30, 2017 - Jun 02, 2017; Seattle, WA; United States
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  • 66
    Publication Date: 2019-08-27
    Description: Historically, NASA's Marshall Space Flight Center (MSFC) has operated a Solar Wind Facility (SWF) to provide long term particle and photon exposure to material samples. The requirements on the particle beam details were not stringent as the cumulative fluence level is the test goal. Motivated by development of the faraday cup instrument on the NASA Solar Probe Plus (SPP) mission, the MSFC SWF has been upgraded to included high fidelity particle beams providing broadbeam ions, broadbeam electrons, and narrow beam protons or ions, which cover a wide dynamic range of solar wind velocity and flux conditions. The large vacuum chamber with integrated cryo-shroud, combined with a 3-axis positioning system, provides an excellent platform for sensor development and qualification. This short paper provides some details of the SWF charged particle beams characteristics in the context of the Solar Probe Plus program requirements. Data will be presented on the flux and energy ranges as well as beam stability.
    Keywords: Solar Physics
    Type: M17-6026 , Applied Space Environments Conference (ASEC); May 15, 2017 - May 19, 2017; Huntsville, AL; United States
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  • 67
    Publication Date: 2019-07-11
    Description: The type III radio bursts are the most intense radio emissions from the sun. In Figure 1, we present a typical type III burst observed by the STEREO spacecraft. Ginzburg and Zheleznyakov (1958) were the first to suggest that Langmuir waves excited by the solar flare accelerated electrons are the source of these bursts. The in situ detection of electron beams and Langmuir waves in association with type III bursts together with tracking of type III burst sources in the interplanetary medium confirmed this plasma hypothesis. However, the dynamics of type III electron beams and their interaction with the ambient plasma through the excited Langmuir waves is an unsolved problem. In order that the electron beams don't lose their energy by resonantly interacting with Langmuir waves, various nonlinear processes, such as the induced scattering of Langmuir waves off the background ions in weak turbulence regime and oscillating two-stream instability in strong turbulence regime were invoked. However, the observed electron density fluctuations do not allow Langmuir waves to grow to very high intensities as pointed out by several authors. As far as the conversion of Langmuir wave energy into electromagnetic energy is concerned, there is no consensus either for the fundamental or for the second harmonic emission. In this paper, we address these issues in terms of critical fluctuations near the boundary of the beam-plasma instability which is analogous to the anomalously growing fluctuations near the phase transition points called critical points. We show that this phenomenon can account for the survival of electron beams over large distances as well as the intensities of Langmuir waves excited during this phase transition regime are sufficient to explain the peak intensities of the fundamental as well as harmonic emissions
    Keywords: Solar Physics
    Type: GSFC-E-DAA-TN51202 , GSFC-E-DAA-TN70416 , Solar Radio Science Highlights
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  • 68
    Publication Date: 2019-07-13
    Description: No abstract available
    Keywords: Solar Physics
    Type: MSFC-E-DAA-TN45980 , AAS Solar Physics Division (SPD) Meeting 2017; Aug 21, 2017 - Aug 24, 2017; Portland, OR; United States
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  • 69
    Publication Date: 2019-07-13
    Description: No abstract available
    Keywords: Solar Physics
    Type: MSFC-E-DAA-TN46163 , Presentation to the local community of Lewisville; Aug 20, 2017; Lewisville, ID; United States
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  • 70
    Publication Date: 2019-07-13
    Description: Coronal jets are frequent magnetically channeled narrow eruptions. They occur in various solar environments: quiet regions, coronal holes and active regions. All coronal jets observed in EUV (Extreme UltraViolet) and X-ray images show a bright spire with a base brightening, also known as jet bright point (JBP). Recent studies show that coronal jets are driven by small-scale filament eruptions. Sterling et al. 2015 did extensive study of 20 polar coronal hole jets and found that X-ray jets are mainly driven by the eruption of minifilaments. What leads to these minifilament eruptions?
    Keywords: Solar Physics
    Type: MSFC-E-DAA-TN45952 , Meeting of the AAS Solar Physics Division; Aug 21, 2017 - Aug 25, 2017; Portland, OR; United States
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  • 71
    Publication Date: 2019-07-13
    Description: Recent observations from Hinode (SOT/FG) revealed the presence of large penumbral jets (widths 500 km, larger than normal penumbral microjets, which have widths 〈 400 km) repeatedly occurring at the same locations in a sunspot penumbra, at the tail of a filament or where the tails of several penumbral filaments apparently converge (Tiwari et al. 2016, ApJ). These locations were observed to have mixed-polarity flux in Stokes-V images from SOT/FG. Large penumbral jets displayed direct signatures in AIA 1600, 304, 171, and 193 channels; thus they were heated to at least transition region temperatures. Because large jets could not be detected in AIA 94 , whether they had any coronal-temperature plasma remains unclear. In the present work, for another sunspot, we use IRIS Mg II k 2796 slit jaw images and spectra and magnetograms from Hinode SOT/FG and SOT/SP to examine: whether penumbral jets spin, similar to spicules and coronal jets in the quiet Sun and coronal holes; whether they stem from mixed-polarity flux; and whether they produce discernible coronal emission, especially in AIA 94 images. The few large penumbral jets for which we have IRIS spectra show evidence of spin. If these have mixed-polarity at their base, then they might be driven the same way as coronal jets and CMEs.
    Keywords: Solar Physics
    Type: MSFC-E-DAA-TN45989 , AAS Solar Physics Division 2017 Annual Meeting; Aug 21, 2017 - Aug 25, 2017; Portland, OR; United States
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  • 72
    Publication Date: 2019-07-13
    Description: A major remaining challenge for heliophysicsis to decipher the magnetic structure of the chromosphere, due to its 'large role in defining how energy is transported into the corona and solar wind' (NASA's Heliophysics Roadmap). Recent observational advances enabled by the Interface Region Imaging Spectrometer (IRIS) have revolutionized our view of the critical role this highly dynamic interface between the photosphere and corona plays in energizing and structuring the outer solar atmosphere. Despite these advances, a major impediment to better understanding the solar atmosphere is our lack of empirical knowledge regarding the direction and strength of the magnetic field in the upper chromosphere. Such measurements are crucial to address several major unresolved issues in solar physics: for example, to constrain the energy flux carried by the Alfven waves propagating through the chromosphere (De Pontieuet al., 2014), and to determine the height at which the plasma = 1 transition occurs, which has important consequences for the braiding of magnetic fields (Cirtainet al., 2013; Guerreiroet al., 2014), for propagation and mode conversion of waves (Tian et al., 2014a; Straus et al., 2008) and for non-linear force-free extrapolation methods that are key to determining what drives instabilities such as flares or coronal mass ejections (e.g., De Rosa et al., 2009). The most reliable method used to determine the solar magnetic field vector is the observation and interpretation of polarization signals in spectral lines, associated with the Zeeman and Hanle effects. Magnetically sensitive ultraviolet spectral lines formed in the upper chromosphere and transition region provide a powerful tool with which to probe this key boundary region (e.g., Trujillo Bueno, 2014). Probing the magnetic nature of the chromosphere requires measurement of the Stokes I, Q, U and V profiles of the relevant spectral lines (of which Q, U and V encode the magnetic field information).
    Keywords: Solar Physics
    Type: MSFC-E-DAA-TN45992 , AAS Solar Physics Division Meeting; Aug 21, 2017 - Aug 25, 2017; Portland, OR; United States
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  • 73
    Publication Date: 2019-07-13
    Description: No abstract available
    Keywords: Solar Physics
    Type: MSFC-E-DAA-TN43596 , SunDC Meeting 2017; Jul 14, 2017; Greenbelt, MD; United States
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  • 74
    Publication Date: 2019-07-13
    Description: Magnetic fields in the Sun's outer atmosphere, the corona, control both solar-wind acceleration and the dynamics of solar eruptions. We present the first clear observational evidence of coronal magnetic nulls in off-limb linearly polarized observations of pseudostreamers, taken by the Coronal Multichannel Polarimeter (CoMP) telescope. These nulls represent regions where magnetic reconnection is likely to act as a catalyst for solar activity.CoMP linear-polarization observations also provide an independent, coronal proxy for magnetic expansion into the solar wind, a quantity often used to parameterize and predict the solar wind speed at Earth. We introduce a new method for explicitly calculating expansion factors from CoMP coronal linear-polarization observations, which does not require photospheric extrapolations. We conclude that linearly polarized light is a powerful new diagnostic of critical coronal magnetic topologies and the expanding magnetic flux tubes that channel the solar wind.
    Keywords: Solar Physics
    Type: MSFC-E-DAA-TN42508 , Astrophysical Journal Letters (ISSN 2041-8205) (e-ISSN 2041-8213); 840; 2; L13
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  • 75
    Publication Date: 2019-07-13
    Description: No abstract available
    Keywords: Solar Physics
    Type: MSFC-E-DAA-TN43847 , Coronal Loops Workshop; Jun 27, 2017 - Jun 30, 2017; Palermo; Italy
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  • 76
    Publication Date: 2019-07-13
    Description: Two of the most widely observed and striking features of the Suns magnetic field are coronal loops, which are smooth and laminar, and prominences or filaments, which are strongly sheared. Loops are puzzling because they show little evidence of tangling or braiding, at least on the quiet Sun, despite the chaotic nature of the solar surface convection. Prominences are mysterious because the origin of their underlying magnetic structure filament channels is poorly understood at best. These two types of features would seem to be quite unrelated and wholly distinct. We argue that, on the contrary, they are inextricably linked and result from a single process: the injection of magnetic helicity into the corona by photospheric motions and the subsequent evolution of this helicity by coronal reconnection. In this paper, we present numerical simulations of the response of a Parker (1972) corona to photospheric driving motions that have varying degrees of helicity preference. We obtain four main conclusions: (1) in agreement with the helicity condensation model of Antiochos (2013), the inverse cascade of helicity by magnetic reconnection in the corona results in the formation of filament channels localized about polarity inversion lines; (2) this same process removes most complex fine structure from the rest of the corona, resulting in smooth and laminar coronal loops; (3) the amount of remnant tangling in coronal loops is inversely dependent on the net helicity injected by the driving motions; and (4) the structure of the solar corona depends only on the helicity preference of the driving motions and not on their detailed time dependence. We discuss the implications of our results for high-resolution observations of the corona.
    Keywords: Solar Physics
    Type: GSFC-E-DAA-TN42988 , The Astrophysical Journal (ISSN 0004-637X) (e-ISSN 1538-4357); 835; 1; 85
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  • 77
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    In:  CASI
    Publication Date: 2019-07-13
    Description: No abstract available
    Keywords: Solar Physics
    Type: MSFC-E-DAA-TN42669 , Institute of Space and Astronautical Science (ISAS) Seminar; May 19, 2017; Makuhari; Japan
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  • 78
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    In:  CASI
    Publication Date: 2019-07-13
    Description: No abstract available
    Keywords: Solar Physics
    Type: MSFC-E-DAA-TN39798 , Talk for Cedar Ridge Middle School 6th Grade; Mar 07, 2017; Decatur, AL; United States
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  • 79
    Publication Date: 2019-07-13
    Description: No abstract available
    Keywords: Solar Physics
    Type: MSFC-E-DAA-TN43391 , MSFC-E-DAA-TN43398 , MSFC-E-DAA-TN43400 , Eclipse Speaker Series; Jun 15, 2017; Nashville, TN; United States|The School for Science and Math at Vanderbilt Presentation; Jun 15, 2017; Nashville, TN; United States|St. Louis Solar Eclipse Expo; Jun 17, 2017; St. Louis, MO; United States
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  • 80
    Publication Date: 2019-07-13
    Description: The international team is promoting the CLASP2 (Chromospheric LAyer Spectro-Polarimeter 2) sounding rocket experiment, which is the re-flight of CLASP (2015). In this second flight, we will refit the existing CLASP instrument to measure all Stokes parameters in Mg II h k lines, and aim at inferring the magnetic field information in the upper chromosphere combining the Hanle and Zeeman effects. CLASP2 project was approved by NASA in December 2016, and is now scheduled to fly in 2019.
    Keywords: Solar Physics
    Type: MSFC-E-DAA-TN42964 , Joint Hinode Science Meeting; May 30, 2017 - Jun 02, 2017; Seattle, WA; United States|Joint IRIS Science Meeting; May 30, 2017 - Jun 02, 2017; Seattle, WA; United States
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  • 81
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    In:  CASI
    Publication Date: 2019-07-13
    Description: No abstract available
    Keywords: Solar Physics
    Type: MSFC-E-DAA-TN41373 , CSPAR Journal Club; Apr 07, 2017; Huntsville, AL; United States
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  • 82
    Publication Date: 2019-07-13
    Description: High cadence spectroscopic observations by CLASP reveal that intensity fluctuations of blue and red peaks of the hydrogen Lyman-alpha line (121.57 nm) recurrently appear in the quiet Sun at short timescale. The intensity fluctuations of the blue and red peaks are opposite in phase to each other: the blue peak is enhanced during the decease of the red peak, and vice versa. Similar intensity fluctuations also can be seen in Mg II h & k profiles observed with IRIS. It is suggested that the short-timescale oscillatory or torsional phenomena take place in the transition region or the upper chromosphere.
    Keywords: Solar Physics
    Type: MSFC-E-DAA-TN42965 , Hinode Science Meeting 2017; May 30, 2017 - Jun 02, 2017; Seattle, WA; United States
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  • 83
    Publication Date: 2019-07-13
    Description: No abstract available
    Keywords: Solar Physics
    Type: MSFC-E-DAA-TN43040 , Joint Hinode-11/IRIS-8 Science Meeting; May 30, 2017 - Jun 02, 2017; Seattle, WA; United States
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  • 84
    Publication Date: 2019-07-13
    Description: No abstract available
    Keywords: Solar Physics
    Type: MSFC-E-DAA-TN43104 , Annual HINODE Science Meeting 2017; May 30, 2017 - Jun 02, 2017; Seattle, WA; United States|Annual IRIS Science Meeting 2017; May 30, 2017 - Jun 02, 2017; Seattle, WA; United States
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  • 85
    Publication Date: 2019-07-13
    Description: No abstract available
    Keywords: Solar Physics
    Type: MSFC-E-DAA-TN39154 , Space Exploration Educators Conference (SEEC); Feb 04, 2017 - Feb 06, 2017; Houston, TX; United States
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  • 86
    Publication Date: 2019-07-13
    Description: Extreme-ultraviolet and X-ray jets occur frequently in magnetically open coronal holes on the Sun, especially at high solar latitudes. Some of these jets are observed by white-light coronagraphs as they propagate through the outer corona toward the inner heliosphere, and it has been proposed that they give rise to microstreams and torsional Alfven waves detected in situ in the solar wind. To predict and understand the signatures of coronal-hole jets, we have performed a detailed statistical analysis of such a jet simulated with an adaptively refined magnetohydrodynamics model. The results confirm the generation and persistence of three-dimensional, reconnection-driven magnetic turbulence in the simulation. We calculate the spatial correlations of magnetic fluctuations within the jet and find that they agree best with the Meuller - Biskamp scaling model including intermittent current sheets of various sizes coupled via hydrodynamic turbulent cascade. The anisotropy of the magnetic fluctuations and the spatial orientation of the current sheets are consistent with an ensemble of nonlinear Alfven waves. These properties also reflect the overall collimated jet structure imposed by the geometry of the reconnecting magnetic field. A comparison with Ulysses observations shows that turbulence in the jet wake is in quantitative agreement with that in the fast solar wind.
    Keywords: Solar Physics
    Type: GSFC-E-DAA-TN35558 , Astrophysical Journal (ISSN 0004-637X) (e-ISSN 1538-4357); 837; 2; 123
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  • 87
    Publication Date: 2019-08-14
    Description: We report here the concept of using near-real time observations from a coronagraph to provide early warning of a fast coronal mass ejection (CME) and the possible onset of a solar energetic particle (SEP) event. The 1 January 2016, fast CME, and its associated SEP event are cited as an example. The CME was detected by the ground-based K-Cor coronagraph at Mauna Loa Solar Observatory and by the SOHO Large Angle and Spectrometric Coronagraph. The near-real-time availability of the high-cadence K-Cor observations in the low corona leads to an obvious question: Why has no one attempted to use a coronagraph as an early warning device for SEP events? The answer is that the low image cadence and the long latency of existing spaceborne coronagraphs make them valid for archival studies but typically unsuitable for near-real-time forecasting. The January 2016 event provided favorable CME viewing geometry and demonstrated that the primary component of a prototype ground-based system for SEP warnings is available several hours on most days. We discuss how a conceptual CME-based warning system relates to other techniques, including an estimate of the relative SEP warning times, and how such a system might be realized.
    Keywords: Solar Physics
    Type: GSFC-E-DAA-TN45799 , AGU Journal/Space Weather (ISSN 1542-7390) (e-ISSN 1542-7390); 15; 1; 240-257
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  • 88
    Publication Date: 2019-08-14
    Description: A major challenge in solar and heliospheric physics is understanding the origin and nature of the so-called slow solar wind. The Sun's atmosphere is divided into magnetically open regions, known as coronal holes, where the plasma streams out freely and fills the solar system, and closed regions, where the plasma is confined to coronal loops. The boundary between these regions extends outward as the heliospheric current sheet (HCS). Measurements of plasma composition strongly imply that much of the slow wind consists of plasma from the closed corona that escapes onto open field lines, presumably by field-line opening or by interchange reconnection. Both of these processes are expected to release closed-field plasma into the solar wind within and immediately adjacent to the HCS. Mysteriously, however, slow wind with closed-field plasma composition is often observed in situ far from the HCS. We use high-resolution, three-dimensional, magnetohydrodynamic simulations to calculate the dynamics of a coronal hole with a geometry that includes a narrow corridor flanked by closed field and is driven by supergranule-like flows at the coronal-hole boundary. These dynamics produce giant arcs of closed-field plasma that originate at the open-closed boundary in the corona, but extend far from the HCS and span tens of degrees in latitude and longitude at Earth. We conclude that such structures can account for the long-puzzling slow-wind observations.
    Keywords: Solar Physics
    Type: GSFC-E-DAA-TN45558 , The Astrophysical Journal Letters (ISSN 2041-8205) (e-ISSN 2041-8213); 840; 1; L10
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  • 89
    Publication Date: 2019-07-12
    Description: Space weather is a naturally occurring phenomenon that represents a quantifiable risk to space- and ground-based infrastructure as well as society at large. Space weather hazards include permanent and correctable faults in computer systems, Global Positioning System (GPS) and high-frequency communication disturbances, increased airline passenger and astronaut radiation exposure, and electric grid disruption. From the National Space Weather Strategy, published by the Office of Science and Technology Policy in October 2015, space weather refers to the dynamic conditions of the space environment that arise from emissions from the Sun, which include solar flares, solar energetic particles, and coronal mass ejections. These emissions can interact with Earth and its surrounding space, including the Earth's magnetic field, potentially disrupting technologies and infrastructures. Space weather is measured using a range of space- and ground-based platforms that directly monitor the Sun, the Earth's magnetic field, the conditions in interplanetary space and impacts at Earth's surface, like neutron ground-level enhancement. The NASA Goddard Space Flight Center's Space Weather Research Center and their international collaborators in government, industry, and academia are working towards improved techniques for predicting space weather as part of the strategy and action plan to better quantify and mitigate space weather hazards. In addition to accurately measuring and predicting space weather, we also need to continue developing more advanced techniques for evaluating space weather impacts on space- and ground-based infrastructure. Within the Earth's atmosphere, elevated neutron flux driven by atmosphere-particle interactions from space weather is a primary risk source. Ground-based neutron sources form an essential foundation for quantifying space weather impacts in a variety of systems.
    Keywords: Solar Physics
    Type: GSFC-E-DAA-TN39511
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  • 90
    Publication Date: 2019-07-12
    Description: No abstract available
    Keywords: Solar Physics
    Type: MSFC-E-DAA-TN47906
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  • 91
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    In:  Other Sources
    Publication Date: 2019-07-12
    Description: No abstract available
    Keywords: Solar Physics
    Type: MSFC-E-DAA-TN45987
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  • 92
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    In:  CASI
    Publication Date: 2019-07-13
    Description: No abstract available
    Keywords: Solar Physics
    Type: MSFC-E-DAA-TN40444 , Alabama University Colloquium; Mar 28, 2017; Huntsville, AL; United States
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  • 93
    Publication Date: 2019-07-13
    Description: The CLASP (Chromospheric Lyman-Alpha Spectro- Polarimeter) rocket experiment, in addition to the ultraviolet region of the Ly alpha emission line (121.57 nm), emission lines of Si III (120.65 nm) and OV (121.83 nm) is can be observed. These are optically thin line compared to a Ly alpha line, if Rarere captured its polarization, there is a possibility that dripping even a new physical diagnosis chromosphere-transition layer. In particular, OV bright light is a release from the transition layer, further, three P one to one S(sub 0) is a forbidden line (cross-triplet transition between lines), it was not quite know whether to polarization.
    Keywords: Solar Physics
    Type: MSFC-E-DAA-TN39902 , 2017 Spring Annual Meeting of the Astronomical Society of Japan; Mar 15, 2017 - Mar 18, 2017; Fukuoka; Japan
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  • 94
    Publication Date: 2019-07-13
    Description: No abstract available
    Keywords: Solar Physics
    Type: MSFC-E-DAA-TN39869 , Astronomical Society of Japan 2017 Spring Annual Meeting; Mar 15, 2017 - Mar 18, 2017; Fukuoka, Fukuoka Prefecture; Japan
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  • 95
    Publication Date: 2019-07-13
    Description: DAVINCI is one of five Discovery-class missions selected by NASA in October 2015 for Phase A studies. Launching in November 2021 and arriving at Venus in June of 2023, DAVINCI would be the first U.S. entry probe to target Venus atmosphere in 45 years. DAVINCI is designed to study the chemical and isotopic composition of a complete cross-section of Venus atmosphere at a level of detail that has not been possible on earlier missions and to image the surface at optical wavelengths and process-relevant scales.
    Keywords: Solar Physics
    Type: GSFC-E-DAA-TN39441 , 2017 IEEE Aerospace Conference; Mar 04, 2017 - Mar 11, 2017; Big Sky, MT; United States
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  • 96
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    In:  CASI
    Publication Date: 2019-07-13
    Description: No abstract available
    Keywords: Solar Physics
    Type: MSFC-E-DAA-TN42400 , Solar Talk at UAH; May 12, 2017; Huntsville, AL; United States
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  • 97
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    In:  CASI
    Publication Date: 2019-07-13
    Description: Comparing the natural meteorite flux at the Earth's surface to that of space debris, reentering debris is approx. 2 orders of magnitude less of a kinetic hazard at all but the very largest (and therefore rarest) sizes compared to natural impactors. Debris re-entries over several metric tonnes are roughly as frequent as natural impactors, but the survival fraction is expected to be much higher. Kinetic hazards from meteorites are very small, with only one recorded (indirect) injury reported. We expect fatalities to be even more rare, on the order of one person killed per several millennia. That several reports exist of small fragments/sand hitting people during meteorite falls is consistent with our prediction that this should occur every decade or so.
    Keywords: Solar Physics
    Type: M17-6007 , IAA Planetary Defense Conference; May 15, 2017 - May 19, 2017; Tokyo; Japan
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  • 98
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    In:  CASI
    Publication Date: 2019-07-13
    Description: No abstract available
    Keywords: Solar Physics
    Type: MSFC-E-DAA-TN44101 , MSFC-E-DAA-TN43380 , Joint Space Weather Summer Camp 2017; Jun 28, 2017; Huntsville, AL; United States|Research Experience for Undergraduates; Jun 09, 2017; Huntsville, AL; United States
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  • 99
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    In:  CASI
    Publication Date: 2019-07-13
    Description: No abstract available
    Keywords: Solar Physics
    Type: MSFC-E-DAA-TN42331 , Presentation to High School Physics Students; May 05, 2017; Fairless Hills, PA; United States
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  • 100
    Publication Date: 2019-07-13
    Description: No abstract available
    Keywords: Solar Physics
    Type: MSFC-E-DAA-TN42667 , Japan Geophysical Union (JpGU); May 20, 2017 - May 25, 2017; Makuhari; Japan
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