The Critical Role of the Research Community in Space Weather Planning and Execution

Publication Date:
2018-02-24
Publisher:
Wiley-Blackwell
Print ISSN:
1539-4964
Electronic ISSN:
1542-7390
Topics:
Geosciences
Physics
Published by:
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autor Robert M. Robinson, Richard A. Behnke, Therese Moretto
beschreibung The explosion of interest in space weather in the last 25 years has been due to a confluence of efforts all over the globe, motivated by the recognition that events on the sun and the consequent conditions in interplanetary space and Earth's magnetosphere, ionosphere, and thermosphere can have serious impacts on vital technological systems. The fundamental research conducted at universities, government laboratories, and in the private sector has led to tremendous improvements in the ability to forecast space weather events and predict their impacts on human technology and health. The mobilization of the research community that made this progress possible was the result of a series of actions taken by the National Science Foundation (NSF) to build a national program aimed at space weather The path forward for space weather is to build on those successes through continued involvement of the research community and support for programs aimed at strengthening basic research and education in academia, the private sector, and government laboratories. Investments in space weather are most effective when applied at the intersection of research and applications. Thus, to achieve the goals set forth originally by the National Space Weather Program, the research community must be fully engaged in the planning, implementation, and execution of space weather activities, currently being coordinated by the Space Weather Operations, Research, and Mitigation Subcommittee under the National Science and Technology Council.
citation_standardnr 6174799
datenlieferant ipn_articles
feed_copyright American Geophysical Union (AGU)
feed_copyright_url http://www.agu.org/
feed_id 39520
feed_publisher Wiley-Blackwell
feed_publisher_url http://www.wiley.com/wiley-blackwell
insertion_date 2018-02-24
journaleissn 1542-7390
journalissn 1539-4964
publikationsjahr_anzeige 2018
publikationsjahr_facette 2018
publikationsjahr_intervall 7984:2015-2019
publikationsjahr_sort 2018
publisher Wiley-Blackwell
quelle Space Weather
relation http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/resolve/doi?DOI=10.1002%2F2017SW001778
search_space articles
shingle_author_1 Robert M. Robinson, Richard A. Behnke, Therese Moretto
shingle_author_2 Robert M. Robinson, Richard A. Behnke, Therese Moretto
shingle_author_3 Robert M. Robinson, Richard A. Behnke, Therese Moretto
shingle_author_4 Robert M. Robinson, Richard A. Behnke, Therese Moretto
shingle_catch_all_1 The Critical Role of the Research Community in Space Weather Planning and Execution
The explosion of interest in space weather in the last 25 years has been due to a confluence of efforts all over the globe, motivated by the recognition that events on the sun and the consequent conditions in interplanetary space and Earth's magnetosphere, ionosphere, and thermosphere can have serious impacts on vital technological systems. The fundamental research conducted at universities, government laboratories, and in the private sector has led to tremendous improvements in the ability to forecast space weather events and predict their impacts on human technology and health. The mobilization of the research community that made this progress possible was the result of a series of actions taken by the National Science Foundation (NSF) to build a national program aimed at space weather The path forward for space weather is to build on those successes through continued involvement of the research community and support for programs aimed at strengthening basic research and education in academia, the private sector, and government laboratories. Investments in space weather are most effective when applied at the intersection of research and applications. Thus, to achieve the goals set forth originally by the National Space Weather Program, the research community must be fully engaged in the planning, implementation, and execution of space weather activities, currently being coordinated by the Space Weather Operations, Research, and Mitigation Subcommittee under the National Science and Technology Council.
Robert M. Robinson, Richard A. Behnke, Therese Moretto
Wiley-Blackwell
1539-4964
15394964
1542-7390
15427390
shingle_catch_all_2 The Critical Role of the Research Community in Space Weather Planning and Execution
The explosion of interest in space weather in the last 25 years has been due to a confluence of efforts all over the globe, motivated by the recognition that events on the sun and the consequent conditions in interplanetary space and Earth's magnetosphere, ionosphere, and thermosphere can have serious impacts on vital technological systems. The fundamental research conducted at universities, government laboratories, and in the private sector has led to tremendous improvements in the ability to forecast space weather events and predict their impacts on human technology and health. The mobilization of the research community that made this progress possible was the result of a series of actions taken by the National Science Foundation (NSF) to build a national program aimed at space weather The path forward for space weather is to build on those successes through continued involvement of the research community and support for programs aimed at strengthening basic research and education in academia, the private sector, and government laboratories. Investments in space weather are most effective when applied at the intersection of research and applications. Thus, to achieve the goals set forth originally by the National Space Weather Program, the research community must be fully engaged in the planning, implementation, and execution of space weather activities, currently being coordinated by the Space Weather Operations, Research, and Mitigation Subcommittee under the National Science and Technology Council.
Robert M. Robinson, Richard A. Behnke, Therese Moretto
Wiley-Blackwell
1539-4964
15394964
1542-7390
15427390
shingle_catch_all_3 The Critical Role of the Research Community in Space Weather Planning and Execution
The explosion of interest in space weather in the last 25 years has been due to a confluence of efforts all over the globe, motivated by the recognition that events on the sun and the consequent conditions in interplanetary space and Earth's magnetosphere, ionosphere, and thermosphere can have serious impacts on vital technological systems. The fundamental research conducted at universities, government laboratories, and in the private sector has led to tremendous improvements in the ability to forecast space weather events and predict their impacts on human technology and health. The mobilization of the research community that made this progress possible was the result of a series of actions taken by the National Science Foundation (NSF) to build a national program aimed at space weather The path forward for space weather is to build on those successes through continued involvement of the research community and support for programs aimed at strengthening basic research and education in academia, the private sector, and government laboratories. Investments in space weather are most effective when applied at the intersection of research and applications. Thus, to achieve the goals set forth originally by the National Space Weather Program, the research community must be fully engaged in the planning, implementation, and execution of space weather activities, currently being coordinated by the Space Weather Operations, Research, and Mitigation Subcommittee under the National Science and Technology Council.
Robert M. Robinson, Richard A. Behnke, Therese Moretto
Wiley-Blackwell
1539-4964
15394964
1542-7390
15427390
shingle_catch_all_4 The Critical Role of the Research Community in Space Weather Planning and Execution
The explosion of interest in space weather in the last 25 years has been due to a confluence of efforts all over the globe, motivated by the recognition that events on the sun and the consequent conditions in interplanetary space and Earth's magnetosphere, ionosphere, and thermosphere can have serious impacts on vital technological systems. The fundamental research conducted at universities, government laboratories, and in the private sector has led to tremendous improvements in the ability to forecast space weather events and predict their impacts on human technology and health. The mobilization of the research community that made this progress possible was the result of a series of actions taken by the National Science Foundation (NSF) to build a national program aimed at space weather The path forward for space weather is to build on those successes through continued involvement of the research community and support for programs aimed at strengthening basic research and education in academia, the private sector, and government laboratories. Investments in space weather are most effective when applied at the intersection of research and applications. Thus, to achieve the goals set forth originally by the National Space Weather Program, the research community must be fully engaged in the planning, implementation, and execution of space weather activities, currently being coordinated by the Space Weather Operations, Research, and Mitigation Subcommittee under the National Science and Technology Council.
Robert M. Robinson, Richard A. Behnke, Therese Moretto
Wiley-Blackwell
1539-4964
15394964
1542-7390
15427390
shingle_title_1 The Critical Role of the Research Community in Space Weather Planning and Execution
shingle_title_2 The Critical Role of the Research Community in Space Weather Planning and Execution
shingle_title_3 The Critical Role of the Research Community in Space Weather Planning and Execution
shingle_title_4 The Critical Role of the Research Community in Space Weather Planning and Execution
timestamp 2025-06-30T23:33:01.096Z
titel The Critical Role of the Research Community in Space Weather Planning and Execution
titel_suche The Critical Role of the Research Community in Space Weather Planning and Execution
topic TE-TZ
U
uid ipn_articles_6174799