the impact of space weather on vital sectors · impact avition 16february 12, 2020 enisa - space...

Post on 14-Jul-2020

0 Views

Category:

Documents

0 Downloads

Preview:

Click to see full reader

TRANSCRIPT

What if the Sun turns off the light?

Dr. Bert van den Oord

i.c.w. Dr. Eelco Doornbos

The impact of spaceweather on vital sectors

Relevance

› Since the ninety's technological revolution:

– Increasing role of satellites services for communication, navigation, monitoring,…

– Development of trans-continental networks for information, transport, power grids

– Replacement of atom clock time code by GNSS time code in many vital sectors

– Improved sensitivity of antenna and radar systems

› Since the ninety's societal revolution:

– Use of internet-based services for social contacts and information exchange

– Use of internet-based services for government communication

› National Risk Assessments indicate non-negligible risk for vital services

– risk = probability x impact

February 12, 2020

ENISA - Space weather indi 2

Event probability impact

Carrington low enormous

Average levels high small

Sun-Earth system: Space Weather

3 February 12, 2020

ENISA - Space weather

Problem:• Every 11 years the polarity of the solar magnetic field alternates• The magnetic field has to be expelled each cycle: solar flares and solar wind• These processes disturb the ionosphere and magnetosphere of the Earth• Impacts (inter)national vital sectors

Needed: development of (national) space weather services & alerts

Different views of the SUN

X-ray

UV- radiation

Visible

ENISA - Space weather

4

February 12, 2020

Solar corona: loops and holes

February 12, 2020 ENISA - Space weather

5

Coronal mass ejections

February 12, 2020 ENISA - Space weather

6

Magnetic Reconnection

Solar flares

Radiation Particles

Proton storms Coronal Mass Ejections Coronal Hole

Solar wind

Particles

ENISA - Space weather

7 February 12, 2020X-ray, EUV, radio

Impact on vital sectors (anecdotal)

8February 12, 2020 ENISA - Space weather

Coronal mass ejections

Relativisticprotons

X-rayimpact ionosphere:GPS/GNSSHF communication

Coherent radio emission

Solar wind

• Drag• Navigation• Time code

VIA MAGNETOSPHERE

DIRECT

DIRECT

VIA IONOSPHERE

C4ISR

February 12, 2020 ENISA - Space weather

9

Cause – effect diagram

13-11-2019

DCC-IenW / KNMI SWx 10

Arrival time prediction CME’s

February 12, 2020

ENISA - Space weather 11

Solar Radio Bursts 10 MHz – 3GHz

12

February 12, 2020 ENISA - Space weather

Relevance for NL: March 17, 2015 GPS in Delft

February 12, 2020 ENISA - Space weather

13

Modelling ionospheric disturbances

Credits NCAR/HAOFebruary 12, 2020

ENISA - Space weather 14

Modelling the solar influence

February 12, 2020

ENISA - Space weather 15Credits NCAR/HAO

Impact avition

16 ENISA - Space weatherFebruary 12, 2020

Aviation ICAO› Space weather in ICAO Annex3 (standard operations)

› Since November 2019 three global centres operational to provide civil aviation with warnings for disturbances in:

– GNSS

– UHF communication

– Radiation levels

PECASUS (FIN, UK, BEL, GER, IT, AU, POL, NL, CYP)

SWPC (USA)

ACJF (AUS, CAN, JAP, FRA)

17

February 12, 2020 ENISA - Space weather

Space WeatherSWE

Near Earth Objects

NEO

Space DebrisSST

Satellites

Vital sectorsCONTINUOUS

ELECTROMAGNETIC

InfrastructuresINCIDENTAL

BOMBARDMENT

February 12, 2020

ENISA - Space weather 18

ESA SPACE SAFETY PROGRAMME

Status space weather

› Developing at national and international level

› Involved organisations:– ESA space safety programme

– EU Commission: Space Programme (COPERNICUS, GALILEO, GOVSATCOM)

– COSPAR: scientific roadmap space weather

– WMO: operational roadmap for space weather (meteorology as example)

– COPUOS/UN: governmental

– ITU: radiofrequency domain effects

– ISES: International Space Enevironment Services

– National services

– ICAO: civil aviation

February 12, 2020

ENISA - Space weather 19

top related