Preliminary results of Space Weather conditions encountered by BepiColombo during the first phase of its cruise
- 1School of Physics and Astronomy, University of Leicester, Leicester, UK (bscmdr1@le.ac.uk)
- 2European Space Agency, ESAC, Madrid, Spain
- 3Technische Universität Braunschweig, Institut für Geophysik und extraterrestrische Physik, Braunschweig, Germany
- 4Department of Physics, University of Helsinki, Finland
- 5Heliophysics Science Division, NASA Goddard Space Flight Center, Greenbelt, Maryland, USA
- 6Department of Physics and Astronomy, George Mason University, Fairfax, Virginia, USA
- 7Space Weather Laboratory, NASA Goddard Space Flight Center, Greenbelt, Maryland, USA
- 8European Space Agency, ESTEC, Noordwijk, The Netherlands
Planetary Space Weather is the discipline that studies the state of the Sun and how it interacts with the interplanetary and planetary environments. It is driven by the Sun’s activity, particularly through large eruptions of plasma (known as coronal mass ejections, CMEs), solar wind stream interaction regions (SIR) formed by the interaction of high-speed solar wind streams with the preceding slower solar wind, and bursts of solar energetic particles (SEPs) that form radiation storms. This is an emerging topic, whose real-time forecast is very challenging because among other factors, it needs a continuous coverage of its variability within the whole heliosphere as well as of the Sun’s activity to improve forecasting.
The long cruise of BepiColombo constitutes an exceptional opportunity for studying the Space Weather evolution within half-astronomical unit (AU), as well as in certain parts of its journey, can be used as an upstream solar wind monitor for Venus, Mars and even the outer planets. This work will present preliminary results of the Space Weather conditions encountered by BepiColombo since its launch until mid-2020, which includes data from the solar minimum of activity and few slow solar wind structures. Data come from three of its instruments that are operational for most of the cruise phase, i.e., the BepiColombo Radiation Monitor (BERM), the Mercury Planetary Orbiter Magnetometer (MPO-MAG), and the Solar Intensity X-ray and particle Spectrometer (SIXS). Modelling support for the data observations will be also presented with the so-called solar wind ENLIL simulations.
How to cite: Sanchez-Cano, B., Moissl, R., Heyner, D., Huovelin, J., Mays, M. L., Odstrcil, D., Lester, M., Bunce, E. J., James, M. K., Witasse, O., and Benkhoff, J.: Preliminary results of Space Weather conditions encountered by BepiColombo during the first phase of its cruise, Europlanet Science Congress 2020, online, 21 September–9 Oct 2020, EPSC2020-689, https://doi.org/10.5194/epsc2020-689, 2020