University of Leicester
Browse
Solar Energetic Particle Events Detected in the Housekeeping Data of the European Space Agency's Spacecraft Flotilla in the Solar System.pdf (6.75 MB)

Solar Energetic Particle Events Detected in the Housekeeping Data of the European Space Agency's Spacecraft Flotilla in the Solar System

Download (6.75 MB)
journal contribution
posted on 2023-10-02, 11:51 authored by B Sánchez-Cano, O Witasse, EW Knutsen, D Meggi, S Viet, M Lester, RF Wimmer-Schweingruber, M Pinto, R Moissl, J Benkhoff, H Opgenoorth, U Auster, J de Brujine, P Collins, G De Marchi, D Fischer, Y Futaana, J Godfrey, D Heyner, M Holmstrom, A Johnstone, S Joyce, D Lakey, S Martinez, D Milligan, E Montagnon, D Müller, SA Livi, T Prusti, J Raines, I Richter, D Schmid, P Schmitz, H Svedhem, MGGT Taylor, E Tremolizzo, D Titov, C Wilson, S Wood, J Zender
Despite the growing importance of planetary Space Weather forecasting and radiation protection for science and robotic exploration and the need for accurate Space Weather monitoring and predictions, only a limited number of spacecraft have dedicated instrumentation for this purpose. However, every spacecraft (planetary or astronomical) has hundreds of housekeeping sensors distributed across the spacecraft, some of which can be useful to detect radiation hazards produced by solar particle events. In particular, energetic particles that impact detectors and subsystems on a spacecraft can be identified by certain housekeeping sensors, such as the Error Detection and Correction (EDAC) memory counters, and their effects can be assessed. These counters typically have a sudden large increase in a short time in their error counts that generally match the arrival of energetic particles to the spacecraft. We investigate these engineering datasets for scientific purposes and perform a feasibility study of solar energetic particle event detections using EDAC counters from seven European Space Agency Solar System missions: Venus Express, Mars Express, ExoMars-Trace Gas Orbiter, Rosetta, BepiColombo, Solar Orbiter, and Gaia. Six cases studies, in which the same event was observed by different missions at different locations in the inner Solar System are analyzed. The results of this study show how engineering sensors, for example, EDAC counters, can be used to infer information about the solar particle environment at each spacecraft location. Therefore, we demonstrate the potential of the various EDAC to provide a network of solar particle detections at locations where no scientific observations of this kind are available.

Funding

Solar wind influence on terrestrial planets' upper atmospheres: unveiling their close interaction

Science and Technology Facilities Council

Find out more...

Space Weather in the inner heliosphere during the BepiColombo cruise (2023-2026)

Science and Technology Facilities Council

Find out more...

A Consolidated Grant Proposal for Solar and Planetary Science at the University of Leicester, 2022 - 2025

Science and Technology Facilities Council

Find out more...

European Space Agency. Grant Numbers: ESA-SCI-SC-LE-134, RFP/3-17233/21/ES/JD

Royal Astronomical Society

CNRS/LATMOS

German Ministerium. Grant Numbers: 50QW1501, 50QW2202, 50QJ1501

Horizon 2020 Framework Programme. Grant Number: 871149

History

Author affiliation

School of Physics & Astronomy, University of Leicester

Version

  • VoR (Version of Record)

Published in

Space Weather

Volume

21

Issue

8

Publisher

American Geophysical Union

issn

1542-7390

eissn

1542-7390

Copyright date

2023

Available date

2023-10-02

Language

en

Usage metrics

    University of Leicester Publications

    Categories

    No categories selected

    Licence

    Exports

    RefWorks
    BibTeX
    Ref. manager
    Endnote
    DataCite
    NLM
    DC