EGU23-8215
https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu23-8215
EGU General Assembly 2023
© Author(s) 2023. This work is distributed under
the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 License.

Space Weather with Uncertainty Quantification: A New Sequence of Data-driven Models of the Solar Atmosphere and Inner Heliosphere

Nikolai V. Pogorelov1, Charles N. Arge2, Jon Linker3, Lisa Upton4, Brian Van Straalen5, Ronald Caplan3, Phillip Colella5, Cooper Downs3, Christopher Gebhard5, Dinesha Vasanta Hegde1, Carl Henney6, Shaela Jones-Mecholsky2, Tae Kim1, Miko Stulajter3, Talwinder Singh1, James Turtle3, and Mehmet Yalim1
Nikolai V. Pogorelov et al.
  • 1University of Alabama in Huntsville, Space Science, Huntsville, United States of America (nikolai.pogorelov@uah.edu)
  • 2Goddard Space Flight Center, Greenbelt, MD, USA (charles.n.arge@nasa.gov)
  • 3Predictive Science Incorporated, San Diego, CA, USA (linkerj@predsci.edu)
  • 4Soutwest Research Institute, Boulder, CO, USA (lisa.upton@swri.org)
  • 5Lawrence Bekeley National Laboratory, Berkeley, CA, USA (bvs@lbl.gov)
  • 6Airforce Research Laboratory, Kirtland, NM (carl.henney.1@spaceforce.mil)

To address Objective II of the National Space Weather Strategy and Action Plan 'Develop and Disseminate Accurate and Timely Space Weather Characterization and Forecasts' and US Congress PROSWIFT Act 116–181, our team is developing a new set of open-source software that would ensure substantial improvements of Space Weather (SWx) predictions. On the one hand, the focus is on the development of data-driven models. On the other hand, each individual component of our software will have higher accuracy with a dramatically improved performance. This is done by the application of new computational technologies and enhanced data sources. The development of such software paves way for improved SWx predictions accompanied with an appropriate uncertainty quantification. This will make it possible to forecast hazardous SWx effects on the space-borne and ground-based technological systems, and on human health. Our models involve (1) a new, open-source solar magnetic flux model (OFT), which evolves information to the back side of the Sun and its poles, and updates the model flux with new observations using data assimilation methods; (2) a new potential field solver (POT3D) associated with the Wang-Sheeley-Arge coronal model, and (3) a new adaptive, 4-th order of accuracy solver (HelioCubed) for the Reynolds-averaged MHD equations implemented on mapped multiblock grids (cubed spheres). We describe the software and results obtained with it, including the appication of machine learning to modeling coronal mass ejections, which makes it possible to improve SWx predictions by decreasing the time-of-arrival mismatch.  The test show that our software is formally more accurate and performs much faster than its predecessors used for SWx predictions.

How to cite: Pogorelov, N. V., Arge, C. N., Linker, J., Upton, L., Van Straalen, B., Caplan, R., Colella, P., Downs, C., Gebhard, C., Hegde, D. V., Henney, C., Jones-Mecholsky, S., Kim, T., Stulajter, M., Singh, T., Turtle, J., and Yalim, M.: Space Weather with Uncertainty Quantification: A New Sequence of Data-driven Models of the Solar Atmosphere and Inner Heliosphere, EGU General Assembly 2023, Vienna, Austria, 24–28 Apr 2023, EGU23-8215, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu23-8215, 2023.