USA flag An official website of the United States government  v

HDPWS

Catalog Access

Solar Proton Events Affecting the Earth Environment

ResourceID
spase://NOAA/Catalog/GOES/Solar_Proton_Events

Description
Flares are characterized by a rise time of the order of minutes and a decay of the order of tens of minutes. The total energy released in a typical flare is about 1027 J; the magnetic field is extraordinarily intense, reaching values of 10-2 to 1 Tesla. This list is constructed by NGDC from the basic reports sent monthly from the ground-based observatories. The National Geophysical Data Center (NGDC) holds archives for about 80 stations, covering the period 1938 to the present. Currently 5 stations send their data to NGDC Boulder on a routine monthly basis. Optical flares in H-alpha are usually accompanied by radio and X-ray bursts, and occasionally by high-energy particle emissions.

View XML | Edit

Details

Version:2.6.1

Catalog

ResourceID
spase://NOAA/Catalog/GOES/Solar_Proton_Events
ResourceHeader
ResourceName
Solar Proton Events Affecting the Earth Environment
ReleaseDate
2024-04-19 18:01:02
Description
Flares are characterized by a rise time of the order of minutes and a decay of the order of tens of minutes. The total energy released in a typical flare is about 1027 J; the magnetic field is extraordinarily intense, reaching values of 10-2 to 1 Tesla. This list is constructed by NGDC from the basic reports sent monthly from the ground-based observatories. The National Geophysical Data Center (NGDC) holds archives for about 80 stations, covering the period 1938 to the present. Currently 5 stations send their data to NGDC Boulder on a routine monthly basis. Optical flares in H-alpha are usually accompanied by radio and X-ray bursts, and occasionally by high-energy particle emissions.
Contacts
Role Person StartDate StopDate Note
1. Developer spase://SMWG/Person/Joseph.B.Gurman 1980-01-01T00:00:00 2010-01-31T23:59:59
AccessInformation
RepositoryID
AccessURL
URL
Description
Preliminary Listing 1976 - 2017 Complete catalog can be found at: ftp://ftp.swpc.noaa.gov/pub/indices/SPE.txtftp://ftp.ngdc.noaa.gov/S
Format
Text
ProviderName
NOAA's Space weather prediction center
InstrumentIDs
PhenomenonType
SolarFlare
PhenomenonType
EnergeticSolarParticleEvent
Parameter #1
Name
PARTICLE EVENT Start (Day/UT)
Description
Earliest Universal Time of flare onset reported within a group.
Units
UT (1.0>UT)
Support
SupportQuantity
Temporal
Parameter #2
Name
PARTICLE EVENT Maximum (Day/UT)
Description
Earliest Universal Time within group that flare reached maximum brightness
Units
UT (1.0>UT)
Support
SupportQuantity
Temporal
Parameter #3
Name
PARTICLE EVENT Proton Flux (pfu @ >10 MeV)
Description
Proton fluxes are integral 5-minute averages for energies >10 MeV, given in Particle Flux Units (pfu), measured by GOES spacecraft at Geosynchronous orbit: 1 pfu = 1 p cm-2 sr-1 s-1. SESC defines the start of a proton event to be the first of 3 consecutive data points with fluxes greater than or equal to 10 pfu. The end of an event is the last time the flux was greater than or equal to 10 pfu. This definition, motivated by SESC customer needs, allows multiple proton flares and/or interplanetary shock proton increases to occur within one SESC proton event. Additional data may be necessary to more completely resolve any individual proton event.
Units
UT (1.0>UT)
Support
SupportQuantity
Other
Parameter #4
Name
PARTICLE EVENT Year
Units
NAR # (1>Unitless)
Support
SupportQuantity
Temporal
Parameter #5
Name
ASSOCIATED CME
Description
Coronal Mass Ejections
Units
degrees (1.0>degrees) Stonyhurst Heliographic
Support
SupportQuantity
Other
Parameter #6
Name
ASSOCIATED FLARE, Maximum (Day/UT)
Description
Time when the maximum of observed flares was reached
Support
SupportQuantity
Temporal
Parameter #7
Name
Importance (X ray/Opt)
Description
Importance of flare at X-ray wavelengths
Support
SupportQuantity
Other
Parameter #8
Name
Location
Description
Location of active region
Support
SupportQuantity
Positional
Parameter #9
Name
NOAA SEC Region No.
Description
Region No. at the NOAA catalog
Support
SupportQuantity
Other