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SMILE Winter Campaign

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SMILE Winter Campaign. / Walach, M-T; Soobiah, Y; Carter, J A et al.
In: RAS Techniques and Instruments, Vol. 3, No. 1, 13.09.2024, p. 556-564.

Research output: Contribution to Journal/MagazineJournal articlepeer-review

Harvard

Walach, M-T, Soobiah, Y, Carter, JA, Whiter, DK, Kavanagh, AJ, Hartinger, MD, Oksavik, K, Salzano, ML & Archer, MO 2024, 'SMILE Winter Campaign', RAS Techniques and Instruments, vol. 3, no. 1, pp. 556-564. https://doi.org/10.1093/rasti/rzae038

APA

Walach, M.-T., Soobiah, Y., Carter, J. A., Whiter, D. K., Kavanagh, A. J., Hartinger, M. D., Oksavik, K., Salzano, M. L., & Archer, M. O. (2024). SMILE Winter Campaign. RAS Techniques and Instruments, 3(1), 556-564. https://doi.org/10.1093/rasti/rzae038

Vancouver

Walach MT, Soobiah Y, Carter JA, Whiter DK, Kavanagh AJ, Hartinger MD et al. SMILE Winter Campaign. RAS Techniques and Instruments. 2024 Sept 13;3(1):556-564. Epub 2024 Aug 30. doi: 10.1093/rasti/rzae038

Author

Walach, M-T ; Soobiah, Y ; Carter, J A et al. / SMILE Winter Campaign. In: RAS Techniques and Instruments. 2024 ; Vol. 3, No. 1. pp. 556-564.

Bibtex

@article{e0d09cb67443489e94b419605d0afc03,
title = "SMILE Winter Campaign",
abstract = "This white paper is highly topical as it relates to the upcoming solar wind magnetosphere ionosphere link explorer (SMILE) mission: SMILE is a joint mission between the European Space Agency and the Chinese Academy of Sciences and it aims to build a more complete understanding of the Sun–Earth connection by measuring the solar wind and its dynamic interaction with the magnetosphere. It is a fully funded mission with a projected launch in 2025. This paper outlines a plan for action for SMILE{\textquoteright}s first Northern hemisphere winter campaign using ground-based instruments. We outline open questions and which data and techniques can be employed to answer them. The science themes we discuss are: (i) Earth{\textquoteright}s magnetosheath, magnetopause, and magnetic cusp impact on the ionospheric cusp region; (ii) defining the relationship between auroral processes, solar wind, and magnetospheric drivers; (iii) understanding the interhemispheric properties of the Earth{\textquoteright}s magnetosphere–ionosphere system. We discuss open questions (different to the mission goals) which may be answered using existing ground-based instrumentation together with SMILE data to leverage the maximum scientific return of the mission during the first winter after launch. This paper acts as a resource for planning, and a call to collaborative action for the scientific community.",
keywords = "Data methods, Future opportunities, Ground-based instrumentation, Instrumentation, SMILE Science",
author = "M-T Walach and Y Soobiah and Carter, {J A} and Whiter, {D K} and Kavanagh, {A J} and Hartinger, {M D} and K Oksavik and Salzano, {M L} and Archer, {M O}",
year = "2024",
month = sep,
day = "13",
doi = "10.1093/rasti/rzae038",
language = "English",
volume = "3",
pages = "556--564",
journal = "RAS Techniques and Instruments",
issn = "2752-8200",
publisher = "Oxford University Press (OUP)",
number = "1",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - SMILE Winter Campaign

AU - Walach, M-T

AU - Soobiah, Y

AU - Carter, J A

AU - Whiter, D K

AU - Kavanagh, A J

AU - Hartinger, M D

AU - Oksavik, K

AU - Salzano, M L

AU - Archer, M O

PY - 2024/9/13

Y1 - 2024/9/13

N2 - This white paper is highly topical as it relates to the upcoming solar wind magnetosphere ionosphere link explorer (SMILE) mission: SMILE is a joint mission between the European Space Agency and the Chinese Academy of Sciences and it aims to build a more complete understanding of the Sun–Earth connection by measuring the solar wind and its dynamic interaction with the magnetosphere. It is a fully funded mission with a projected launch in 2025. This paper outlines a plan for action for SMILE’s first Northern hemisphere winter campaign using ground-based instruments. We outline open questions and which data and techniques can be employed to answer them. The science themes we discuss are: (i) Earth’s magnetosheath, magnetopause, and magnetic cusp impact on the ionospheric cusp region; (ii) defining the relationship between auroral processes, solar wind, and magnetospheric drivers; (iii) understanding the interhemispheric properties of the Earth’s magnetosphere–ionosphere system. We discuss open questions (different to the mission goals) which may be answered using existing ground-based instrumentation together with SMILE data to leverage the maximum scientific return of the mission during the first winter after launch. This paper acts as a resource for planning, and a call to collaborative action for the scientific community.

AB - This white paper is highly topical as it relates to the upcoming solar wind magnetosphere ionosphere link explorer (SMILE) mission: SMILE is a joint mission between the European Space Agency and the Chinese Academy of Sciences and it aims to build a more complete understanding of the Sun–Earth connection by measuring the solar wind and its dynamic interaction with the magnetosphere. It is a fully funded mission with a projected launch in 2025. This paper outlines a plan for action for SMILE’s first Northern hemisphere winter campaign using ground-based instruments. We outline open questions and which data and techniques can be employed to answer them. The science themes we discuss are: (i) Earth’s magnetosheath, magnetopause, and magnetic cusp impact on the ionospheric cusp region; (ii) defining the relationship between auroral processes, solar wind, and magnetospheric drivers; (iii) understanding the interhemispheric properties of the Earth’s magnetosphere–ionosphere system. We discuss open questions (different to the mission goals) which may be answered using existing ground-based instrumentation together with SMILE data to leverage the maximum scientific return of the mission during the first winter after launch. This paper acts as a resource for planning, and a call to collaborative action for the scientific community.

KW - Data methods

KW - Future opportunities

KW - Ground-based instrumentation

KW - Instrumentation

KW - SMILE Science

U2 - 10.1093/rasti/rzae038

DO - 10.1093/rasti/rzae038

M3 - Journal article

VL - 3

SP - 556

EP - 564

JO - RAS Techniques and Instruments

JF - RAS Techniques and Instruments

SN - 2752-8200

IS - 1

ER -