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The Directional Statistics of Extreme Geomagnetic Field Variations

Research output: Contribution to conference - Without ISBN/ISSN Abstract

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The Directional Statistics of Extreme Geomagnetic Field Variations. / Rogers, Neil; Wild, Jim; Eastoe, Emma.
2019. Abstract from National Astronomy Meeting 2019, Lancaster, United Kingdom.

Research output: Contribution to conference - Without ISBN/ISSN Abstract

Harvard

Rogers, N, Wild, J & Eastoe, E 2019, 'The Directional Statistics of Extreme Geomagnetic Field Variations', National Astronomy Meeting 2019, Lancaster, United Kingdom, 30/06/19 - 4/07/19.

APA

Rogers, N., Wild, J., & Eastoe, E. (2019). The Directional Statistics of Extreme Geomagnetic Field Variations. Abstract from National Astronomy Meeting 2019, Lancaster, United Kingdom.

Vancouver

Rogers N, Wild J, Eastoe E. The Directional Statistics of Extreme Geomagnetic Field Variations. 2019. Abstract from National Astronomy Meeting 2019, Lancaster, United Kingdom.

Author

Rogers, Neil ; Wild, Jim ; Eastoe, Emma. / The Directional Statistics of Extreme Geomagnetic Field Variations. Abstract from National Astronomy Meeting 2019, Lancaster, United Kingdom.1 p.

Bibtex

@conference{ec52bc701bb94da6b7c527449cd1e1e4,
title = "The Directional Statistics of Extreme Geomagnetic Field Variations",
abstract = "Understanding the statistics of large and rapid changes in the horizontal component of the geomagnetic field (dB/dt) is important in modelling the probabilities of geomagnetically induced currents (GIC) in ground infrastructure. In a study of |dB/dt| measured at 125 magnetometers worldwide over several decades, extreme value theory (Coles 2001) was used to predict the magnitudes of such events for return periods up to 200 years. These were modelled as a function of geomagnetic latitude, magnetic local time, season, solar activity, and the orientation of the interplanetary magnetic field. Patterns of occurrence relate closely to the known statistics of ionospheric and magnetospheric current systems associated with Sudden Commencements, Pc5 ULF waves, and auroral substorm onsets. Directionality is an important consideration when assessing the risk of GICs affecting long cables and networks. We have therefore examined the directional statistics of the field fluctuations, drawing on methods developed for other environmental datasets (extreme sea currents, wind speeds, etc.) The modal directions of dB/dt are associated with the principal current systems driving the field fluctuations and also depend on the time-scale (dt) of the fluctuation. Reference:S. Coles, An introduction to Statistical Modeling of Extreme Values, Springer-Verlag London ltd, 2001. ",
keywords = "Extreme value theory, geomagnetic field, Geomagnetically induced currents (GIC)",
author = "Neil Rogers and Jim Wild and Emma Eastoe",
year = "2019",
language = "English",
note = "National Astronomy Meeting 2019, NAM 2019 ; Conference date: 30-06-2019 Through 04-07-2019",

}

RIS

TY - CONF

T1 - The Directional Statistics of Extreme Geomagnetic Field Variations

AU - Rogers, Neil

AU - Wild, Jim

AU - Eastoe, Emma

PY - 2019

Y1 - 2019

N2 - Understanding the statistics of large and rapid changes in the horizontal component of the geomagnetic field (dB/dt) is important in modelling the probabilities of geomagnetically induced currents (GIC) in ground infrastructure. In a study of |dB/dt| measured at 125 magnetometers worldwide over several decades, extreme value theory (Coles 2001) was used to predict the magnitudes of such events for return periods up to 200 years. These were modelled as a function of geomagnetic latitude, magnetic local time, season, solar activity, and the orientation of the interplanetary magnetic field. Patterns of occurrence relate closely to the known statistics of ionospheric and magnetospheric current systems associated with Sudden Commencements, Pc5 ULF waves, and auroral substorm onsets. Directionality is an important consideration when assessing the risk of GICs affecting long cables and networks. We have therefore examined the directional statistics of the field fluctuations, drawing on methods developed for other environmental datasets (extreme sea currents, wind speeds, etc.) The modal directions of dB/dt are associated with the principal current systems driving the field fluctuations and also depend on the time-scale (dt) of the fluctuation. Reference:S. Coles, An introduction to Statistical Modeling of Extreme Values, Springer-Verlag London ltd, 2001.

AB - Understanding the statistics of large and rapid changes in the horizontal component of the geomagnetic field (dB/dt) is important in modelling the probabilities of geomagnetically induced currents (GIC) in ground infrastructure. In a study of |dB/dt| measured at 125 magnetometers worldwide over several decades, extreme value theory (Coles 2001) was used to predict the magnitudes of such events for return periods up to 200 years. These were modelled as a function of geomagnetic latitude, magnetic local time, season, solar activity, and the orientation of the interplanetary magnetic field. Patterns of occurrence relate closely to the known statistics of ionospheric and magnetospheric current systems associated with Sudden Commencements, Pc5 ULF waves, and auroral substorm onsets. Directionality is an important consideration when assessing the risk of GICs affecting long cables and networks. We have therefore examined the directional statistics of the field fluctuations, drawing on methods developed for other environmental datasets (extreme sea currents, wind speeds, etc.) The modal directions of dB/dt are associated with the principal current systems driving the field fluctuations and also depend on the time-scale (dt) of the fluctuation. Reference:S. Coles, An introduction to Statistical Modeling of Extreme Values, Springer-Verlag London ltd, 2001.

KW - Extreme value theory

KW - geomagnetic field

KW - Geomagnetically induced currents (GIC)

M3 - Abstract

T2 - National Astronomy Meeting 2019

Y2 - 30 June 2019 through 4 July 2019

ER -