Improving solar wind forecasting using Data Assimilation [CL]

http://arxiv.org/abs/2012.06362


Data Assimilation (DA) has enabled huge improvements in the skill of terrestrial operational weather forecasting. In this study, we use a variational DA scheme with a computationally efficient solar wind model and in situ observations from STEREO A, STEREO B and ACE. This scheme enables solar-wind observations far from the Sun, such as at 1 AU, to update and improve the inner boundary conditions of the solar wind model (at $30$ solar radii). In this way, observational information can be used to improve estimates of the near-Earth solar wind, even when the observations are not directly downstream of the Earth. This allows improved initial conditions of the solar wind to be passed into forecasting models. To this effect we employ the HUXt solar wind model to produce 27-day forecasts of the solar wind during the operational time of STEREO B ($01/11/2007-30/09/2014$). At ACE, we compare these DA forecasts to the corotation of STEREO B observations and find that $27$-day RMSE for STEREO-B corotation and DA forecasts are comparable. However, the DA forecast is shown to improve solar wind forecasts when STEREO-B’s latitude is offset from Earth. And the DA scheme enables the representation of the solar wind in the whole model domain between the Sun and the Earth to be improved, which will enable improved forecasting of CME arrival time and speed.

Read this paper on arXiv…

M. Lang, J. Witherington, H. Turner, et. al.
Mon, 14 Dec 20
53/74

Comments: 24 pages, 10 figures, 3 tables, under review in Space Weather journal