CEDAR email: Announcement : Earth Planets and Space Special Issue on May 2024 geogmagnetic storm
Thomas J. Immel
immel at ssl.berkeley.edu
Tue Dec 3 13:09:24 MST 2024
Greetings CEDAR Research Community,
I am pleased to announce the opportunity for reporting new scientific findings related to the remarkable geomagnetic storms of 2024 in the international open journal Earth, Planets and Space. For information on this journal, the special issue, and submitting your manuscript, please follow this link: https://earth-planets-space.springeropen.com/, or see below for more details.
Submission Status: Open | Submission Deadline: 31 May 2025
Extreme Space Weather Events in May 2024: New Discoveries and Future Challenges
Edited by:
Yoshizumi Miyoshi, PhD, Nagoya University, Japan
Takuya Tsugawa, PhD, National Institute of Information and Communications Technology, Japan
Shin Toriumi, PhD, Japan Aerospace Exploration Agency, Japan
Thomas Immel, PhD, University of California, Berkeley, United States
Nat Gopalswamy, PhD, National Aeronautics and Space Administration, United States
Masahito Nosé, PhD, Nagoya City University, Japan
Earth, Planets and Space<https://earth-planets-space.springeropen.com/> is calling for submissions to our Collection on "Extreme Space Weather Events in May 2024: New Discoveries and Future Challenges".
About the Collection
This special issue invites submissions focused on advancing our understanding of space weather phenomena, particularly those related to the intense geomagnetic storms that occurred in May 2024. We encourage papers addressing various aspects of the Sun-Earth connection. Contributions combining both observations and simulations are highly welcomed, with a focus on improving space weather prediction capabilities and understanding the impact on both natural and human-made systems. This issue will highlight the research on Sun, interplanetary space, magnetosphere, ionosphere, and atmosphere. We also welcome studies on the interactions between the solar wind and planetary systems.
Topics of interest in this collection include, but are not limited to:
* The Sun-Earth connection: Processes linking solar activity, including solar flares, to space weather phenomena
* Propagation and impact of coronal mass ejections (CMEs) in interplanetary space
* Interactions between the solar wind and the Earth's magnetosphere
* Dynamics of the magnetosphere: Wave-particle interactions, radiation belt dynamics, ring current build up, ion outflow
Submission Status: Open | Submission Deadline: 31 May 2025
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Thomas J. Immel
Associate Director for Geospace Science
Space Sciences Laboratory
University of California, Berkeley
7 Gauss Way
Berkeley, CA 94720-7450
510-643-3504
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