Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
1766439 | Advances in Space Research | 2009 | 7 Pages |
Abstract
We present and discuss here the first version of a data base of extreme solar and heliospheric events. The data base contains now 87 extreme events mostly since 1940. An event is classified as extreme if one of the three critical parameters passed a lower limit. The critical parameters were the X-ray flux (parameter R), solar proton flux (parameter S) and geomagnetic disturbance level (parameter G). We find that the five strongest extreme events based on four variables (X-rays SEP, Dst, Ap) are completely separate except for the October 2003 event which is one the five most extreme events according to SEP, Dst and Ap. This underlines the special character of the October 2003 event, making it unique within 35 years. We also find that the events based on R and G are rather separate, indicating that the location of even extreme flares on the solar disk is important for geomagnetic effects. We also find that SÂ =Â 3 events are not extreme in the same sense as RÂ >Â 3 and GÂ >Â 3 events, while SÂ =Â 5 events are missing so far. This suggests that it might be useful to rescale the classification of SEP fluxes.
Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering
Earth and Planetary Sciences
Space and Planetary Science
Authors
O.S. Yakovchouk, I.S. Veselovsky, K. Mursula,