Annales Geophysicae (Nov 2005)

Space weather and space anomalies

  • L. I. Dorman,
  • L. I. Dorman,
  • N. Iucci,
  • A. V. Belov,
  • A. E. Levitin,
  • E. A. Eroshenko,
  • N. G. Ptitsyna,
  • G. Villoresi,
  • G. V. Chizhenkov,
  • L. I. Gromova,
  • M. Parisi,
  • M. I. Tyasto,
  • V. G. Yanke

DOI
https://doi.org/10.5194/angeo-23-3009-2005
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 23
pp. 3009 – 3018

Abstract

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A large database of anomalies, registered by 220 satellites in different orbits over the period 1971-1994 has been compiled. For the first time, data from 49 Russian Kosmos satellites have been included in a statistical analysis. The database also contains a large set of daily and hourly space weather parameters. A series of statistical analyses made it possible to quantify, for different satellite orbits, space weather conditions on the days characterized by anomaly occurrences. In particular, very intense fluxes (>1000 pfu at energy >10 MeV) of solar protons are linked to anomalies registered by satellites in high-altitude (>15000 km), near-polar (inclination >55°) orbits typical for navigation satellites, such as those used in the GPS network, NAVSTAR, etc. (the rate of anomalies increases by a factor ~20), and to a much smaller extent to anomalies in geostationary orbits, (they increase by a factor ~4). Direct and indirect connections between anomaly occurrence and geomagnetic perturbations are also discussed.