The UN/ESA Workshops on Basic Space Science in the Developing Countries
H. J. Haubold, W. Wamsteker
DOI: 10.1007/1-4020-2519-X_1
Chapter In book: Developing Basic Space Science World-Wide, pp.3-8
Abstract
The origin and evolution of the UN/ESA Workshops on Basic Space Science (BSS) is discussed. We highlight here the motivation
and results in global terms. The various new insights in the role of BSS in a sustainable development are indicated.
Understanding space weather to shield society:
A global road map for 2015–2025 commissioned by COSPAR and ILWS
Carolus J. Schrijver, Kirsti Kauristie, , Alan D. Aylward, Clezio M. Denardini, Sarah E. Gibson, Alexi Glover, Nat Gopalswamy, Manuel Grande, Mike Hapgood, Daniel Heynderickx, Norbert Jakowski, Vladimir V. Kalegaev, Giovanni Lapenta, Jon A. Linker, Siqing Liu, Cristina H. Mandrini, Ian R. Mann, Tsutomu Nagatsuma, Dibyendu Nandy, Takahiro Obara, T. Paul O’Brien, Terrance Onsager, Hermann J. Opgenoorth, Michael Terkildsen, Cesar E. Valladares, Nicole Vilmer
DOI: 10.1016/j.asr.2015.03.023
Published:Advances in Space Research,Vol.55, Iss.12, pp.2745–2807, 15 June 2015,
Abstract
There is a growing appreciation that the environmental conditions that we call space weather impact the technological infrastructure that powers the coupled economies around the world. With that comes the need to better shield society against space weather by improving forecasts, environmental specifications, and infrastructure design. We recognize that much progress has been made and continues to be made with a powerful suite of research observatories on the ground and in space, forming the basis of a Sun–Earth system observatory. But the domain of space weather is vast – extending from deep within the Sun to far outside the planetary orbits - and the physics complex - including couplings between various types of physical processes that link scales and domains from the microscopic to large parts of the solar system. Consequently, advanced understanding of space weather requires a coordinated international approach to effectively provide awareness of the processes within the Sun–Earth system through observation-driven models. This roadmap prioritizes the scientific focus areas and research infrastructure that are needed to significantly advance our understanding of space weather of all intensities and of its implications for society. Advancement of the existing system observatory through the addition of small to moderate state-of-the-art capabilities designed to fill observational gaps will enable significant advances. Such a strategy requires urgent action: key instrumentation needs to be sustained, and action needs to be taken before core capabilities are lost in the aging ensemble. We recommend advances through priority focus (1) on observation-based modeling throughout the Sun–Earth system, (2) on forecasts more than 12 h ahead of the magnetic structure of incoming coronal mass ejections, (3) on understanding the geospace response to variable solar-wind stresses that lead to intense geomagnetically-induced currents and ionospheric and radiation storms, and (4) on developing a comprehensive specification of space climate, including the characterization of extreme space storms to guide resilient and robust engineering of technological infrastructures. The roadmap clusters its implementation recommendations by formulating three action pathways, and outlines needed instrumentation and research programs and infrastructure for each of these.
An executive summary provides an overview of all recommendations.
Download as from this site.
The International Space Weather Initiative (ISWI)
Madhulika Guhathakurta, Joseph M. Davila, and Nat Gopalswamy
DOI: 10.1002/swe.20048
Published: Space Weather,Vol.11, Iss.6, pp. 327–329, June 2013
Download as from this site.
First Magdas Equipment In Ecuador
Ericson López, George Maeda, Klever Vicente, K. Yumoto,
N. Vasquez, H. Matsushita, A. Shishime, C. Vásconez
1310.0886 Published: Thu, 3 Oct 2013
Download as from this site.
Establishment of
the new Ecuadorian solar physics phenomena division
Ericson D. Lopez
1310.0885 Published: Thu, 3 Oct 2013
Download as from this site.
Heliosheath:
Diffusion Entropy Analysis and Nonextensivity q-Triplet
A. Haubold, H.J. Haubold, and D. Kumar
1202.3417v1 Published: Wed, 15 Feb 2012
Download as from this site.
United Nations Basic Space Science Initiative:
2011 Status Report on the
International Space Weather Initiative
S. Gadimova, H.J. Haubold, D. Danov, K. Georgieva, G. Maeda, K. Yumoto,
J.M. Davila, N. Gopalswami
1108.2247 Published: Wed, 10 Aug 2011
Download as from this site.
Solar Activity in 1992-2003
Solar Cycle 23 Observed by Flare Monitoring Telescope
Kazunari Shibata, Reizaburo Kitai , Miwako Katoda et al.
225mm x162mm x 32mm hardcaver 546 pages JPY 5,200 DVD-ROM
ISBN: 9784876989874
language: Japanese and English
Table of contents (click here)
| A/AC.105/979 |
Distr.: General
28 December 2010
Original: Arabic/English/Russian/Spanish |
Reports on National and Regional Activities Related to ISWI
The present document contains reports received from Austria, Canada, Germany, Iraq, Japan, Slovakia and Spain, as well as from the Committee on Space Research (COSPAR), the International Astronomical Union (IAU), the Planetary Society and the World Meteorological Organization (WMO).
Download 421 Kb pdf, 18 pages, (click )
Universal Heliophysical Processes
Nat Gopalswamy
in
"The Sun, the Solar Wind, and the Heliosphere"
Edited by Mari Paz Miralles and Jorge Sánchez Almeida
"IAGA Special Sopron Book Series" Volume 4, 2011
This is a book that just got published and is relevant to ISWI. Dr Nat Gopalswamy (NASA, Goddard Space Flight Center) has a chapter
in this book. This chapter summarizes the IHY session that was held in Sopron, Hungary, in 2009.
Here is the link for the book:
DOI: 10.1007/978-90-481-9787-3
The copy of this chapter can be found here.
To: Hans Haubold, Joseph M. Davila, Natchimuthuk Gopalswamy,
Sent: Fri Aug 06 03:57:13 2010
To cite your eBook, please use the following link, which represents its unique electronic identifier: DOI: 10.1007/978-3-211-99180-0.
Your publication is a very valuable addition to Springer's book program.