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[{"authors":null,"categories":null,"content":"I am a Senior Researcher at the Space Research Laboratory at the University of Turku in Finland. As a member of multiple EU Horizon Europe projects that investigate Solar Energetic Particle (SEP) events, I am focussing on the analysis of energetic charged particles in the helisophere, with an emphasis on providing open-source Python software for this purpose. Furthermore, within the Finnish Centre of Excellence in Research of Sustainable Space (FORESAIL), I am investigating charged particles measured in the vicinity of Earth using CubeSats.\n","date":-62135596800,"expirydate":-62135596800,"kind":"term","lang":"en","lastmod":-62135596800,"objectID":"2525497d367e79493fd32b198b28f040","permalink":"","publishdate":"0001-01-01T00:00:00Z","relpermalink":"","section":"authors","summary":"I am a Senior Researcher at the Space Research Laboratory at the University of Turku in Finland. As a member of multiple EU Horizon Europe projects that investigate Solar Energetic Particle (SEP) events, I am focussing on the analysis of energetic charged particles in the helisophere, with an emphasis on providing open-source Python software for this purpose.","tags":null,"title":"Jan Gieseler","type":"authors"},{"authors":[],"categories":null,"content":" Click on the Slides button above to view the built-in slides feature. Slides can be added in a few ways:\n Create slides using Wowchemy\u0026rsquo;s Slides feature and link using slides parameter in the front matter of the talk file Upload an existing slide deck to static/ and link using url_slides parameter in the front matter of the talk file Embed your slides (e.g. Google Slides) or presentation video on this page using shortcodes. Further event details, including page elements such as image galleries, can be added to the body of this page.\n","date":1906549200,"expirydate":-62135596800,"kind":"page","lang":"en","lastmod":1906549200,"objectID":"a8edef490afe42206247b6ac05657af0","permalink":"https://jgieseler.github.io/talk/example-talk/","publishdate":"2017-01-01T00:00:00Z","relpermalink":"/talk/example-talk/","section":"event","summary":"An example talk using Wowchemy's Markdown slides feature.","tags":[],"title":"Example Talk","type":"event"},{"authors":["D. E. Morosan","N. Dresing","C. Palmroos","J. Gieseler","I. C. Jebaraj","A. Warmuth","A. Fedeli","S. Normo","J. Pomoell","E. K. J. Kilpua","P. Zucca","B. Dabrowski","A. Krankowski","G. Mann","C. Vocks","R. Vainio"],"categories":[],"content":"","date":1735689600,"expirydate":-62135596800,"kind":"page","lang":"en","lastmod":1738066081,"objectID":"b5ca2d55fe923f627aef4b9b882dd456","permalink":"https://jgieseler.github.io/publication/morosan-2025/","publishdate":"2025-01-28T12:07:58.361022Z","relpermalink":"/publication/morosan-2025/","section":"publication","summary":"*Context.* Solar energetic particles in the heliosphere are produced by flaring processes on the Sun or by shocks driven by coronal mass ejections. These particles are regularly detected remotely as electromagnetic radiation (X-rays or radio emission), which they generate through various processes, or in situ by spacecraft monitoring the Sun and the heliosphere.*Aims.* Our aim is to combine remote-sensing and in situ observations of energetic electrons to determine the origin and acceleration mechanism of these particles.*Methods.* Here we investigate the acceleration location, escape, and propagation directions of electron beams producing radio bursts observed with the Low Frequency Array (LOFAR), hard X-ray (HXR) emission, and in situ electrons observed at Solar Orbiter on 3 October 2023. These observations are combined with a three-dimensional (3D) representation of the electron acceleration locations and results from a magnetohydrodynamic (MHD) model of the solar corona in order to investigate the origin and connectivity of electrons observed remotely at the Sun to in situ electrons.*Results.* We observed a type II radio burst with good connectivity to Solar Orbiter, where a significant electron event was detected. However, type III radio bursts and hard X-rays were also observed co-temporally with the electron event, but likely connected to Solar Orbiter by different far-side field lines. The injection times of the Solar Orbiter electrons are simultaneous with both the onset of the type II radio burst, the group of type III bursts, and the presence of a second HXR peak; however, the most direct connection to Solar Orbiter is that of the type II burst location. The in situ electron spectra point to shock acceleration of electrons with a short-term connection to the source region.*Conclusions.* We propose that there are two contributions to the Solar Orbiter electron fluxes based on the results and magnetic connectivity determined from remote-sensing data: a smaller flare contribution from the far-side of the Sun and a main shock contribution from the region close to the eastern limb as viewed from Earth. We note that these two electron acceleration regions are distinct and separated by a large distance and are connected via two separate field lines to Solar Orbiter.","tags":[],"title":"Determining the acceleration regions of in situ electrons using remote radio and X-ray observations","type":"publication"},{"authors":["G. U. Farwa","N. Dresing","J. Gieseler","L. Vuorinen","I. G. Richardson","C. Palmroos","S. Valkila","B. Heber","S. Jensen","P. Kühl","L. Rodríguez-García","R. Vainio"],"categories":[],"content":"","date":1735689600,"expirydate":-62135596800,"kind":"page","lang":"en","lastmod":1737114225,"objectID":"28a544ef73ba1610bb947e80b381e650","permalink":"https://jgieseler.github.io/publication/farwa-2025/","publishdate":"2025-01-17T11:43:40.222262Z","relpermalink":"/publication/farwa-2025/","section":"publication","summary":"*Context.* Solar energetic particle (SEP) events are related to solar flares and fast coronal mass ejections (CMEs). In the case of large events, which are typically associated with both a strong flare and a fast CME driving a shock front, identification of the dominant SEP acceleration mechanism is challenging.*Aims.* Using novel spacecraft observations of strong SEP events detected in solar cycle 25, we aim to identify the parent acceleration region of the observed electron and proton events.*Methods.* We analysed 45 SEP events in November 2020 – May 2023 including 25 MeV protons using data from multiple spacecraft, including Solar Orbiter, near-Earth spacecraft (SOHO and Wind), STEREO A, BepiColombo, and Parker Solar Probe. We used peak intensities of 25–40 MeV protons and ∼100 keV and 1 MeV electrons provided by the SERPENTINE multi-spacecraft SEP event catalogue, and studied the correlations between these peak intensities as well as with the intensity of a soft-X-ray flare associated with the SEP event. We also separated the events into those well connected and those poorly connected to the flare by the interplanetary magnetic field.*Results.* We find significant correlations between electron and proton peak intensities. While events detected by poorly connected observers show a single population of events, consistent with the idea that these particles are all accelerated by a spatially extended CME-driven shock, events observed in well-connected regions show two populations. One of these populations presents higher proton peak intensities that correlate with electron peak intensities, similarly to the poorly connected events. The other population shows low proton intensities that are less well correlated with electron peak intensities. Based on our findings, we propose that the latter population is a mixture of flare- and shock-accelerated events.*Conclusions.* Although this study focuses on relatively energetic SEP events including 25 MeV protons often attributed to acceleration by CME-driven shocks, we find clear indications of a flare contribution to both electron and proton fluxes in those events originating in sectors magnetically well connected to the source region.","tags":["SEP","SERPENTINE","Solar Energetic Particles"],"title":"Electron and proton peak intensities as observed by a five-spacecraft fleet in solar cycle 25","type":"publication"},{"authors":["N. Dresing","A. Yli-Laurila","S. Valkila","J. Gieseler","D. E. Morosan","G. U. Farwa","Y. Kartavykh","C. Palmroos","I. Jebaraj","S. Jensen","P. Kühl","B. Heber","F. Espinosa","R. Gómez-Herrero","E. Kilpua","V.-V. Linho","P. Oleynik","L. A. Hayes","A. Warmuth","F. Schuller","H. Collier","H. Xiao","E. Asvestari","D. Trotta","J. G. Mitchell","C. M. S. Cohen","A. W. Labrador","M. E. Hill","R. Vainio"],"categories":[],"content":"","date":1719792000,"expirydate":-62135596800,"kind":"page","lang":"en","lastmod":1736428328,"objectID":"a7396562b49c176568480d58a4ec1d82","permalink":"https://jgieseler.github.io/publication/dresing-2024/","publishdate":"2025-01-09T13:12:07.999587Z","relpermalink":"/publication/dresing-2024/","section":"publication","summary":"*Context.* The solar energetic particle analysis platform for the inner heliosphere (SERPENTINE) project, funded through the H2020-SPACE-2020 call of the European Union’s Horizon 2020 framework program, employs measurements of the new inner heliospheric spacecraft fleet to address several outstanding questions on the origin of solar energetic particle (SEP) events. The data products of SERPENTINE include event catalogs, which are provided to the scientific community.*Aims.* In this paper, we present SERPENTINE’s new multi-spacecraft SEP event catalog for events observed in solar cycle 25. Observations from five different viewpoints are utilized, provided by Solar Orbiter, Parker Solar Probe, STEREO A, BepiColombo, and the near-Earth spacecraft Wind and SOHO. The catalog contains key SEP parameters for 25–40 MeV protons, ~1 MeV electrons, and ~100 keV electrons. Furthermore, basic parameters of associated flares and type II radio bursts are listed, as are the coordinates of the observer and solar source locations.*Methods.* An event is included in the catalog if at least two spacecraft detect a significant proton event with energies of 25–40 MeV. The SEP onset times were determined using the Poisson-CUSUM method. The SEP peak times and intensities refer to the global intensity maximum. If different viewing directions are available, we used the one with the earliest onset for the onset determination and the one with the highest peak intensity for the peak identification. We furthermore aimed to use a high time resolution to provide the most accurate event times. Therefore, we opted to use a 1-min time resolution, and more time averaging of the SEP intensity data was only applied if necessary to determine clean event onsets and peaks. Associated flares were identified using observations from near Earth and Solar Orbiter. Associated type II radio bursts were determined from ground-based observations in the metric frequency range and from spacecraft observations in the decametric range.*Results.* The current version of the catalog contains 45 multi-spacecraft events observed in the period from November 2020 until May 2023, of which 13 events were found to be widespread (observed at longitudes separated by at least 80° from the associated flare location) and four could be classified as narrow-spread events (not observed at longitudes separated by at least 80° from the associated flare location). Using X-ray observations by GOES/XRS and Solar Orbiter/STIX, we were able to identify the associated flare in all but four events. Using ground-based and space-borne radio observations, we found an associated type II radio burst for 40 events. In total, the catalog contains 142 single event observations, of which 20 (45) have been observed at radial distances below 0.6 AU (0.8 AU). It is anticipated that the catalog will be extended in the future.","tags":["Python","SEP","SERPENTINE","Solar Energetic Particles"],"title":"The solar cycle 25 multi-spacecraft solar energetic particle event catalog of the SERPENTINE project","type":"publication"},{"authors":["D. E. Morosan","J. Pomoell","C. Palmroos","N. Dresing","E. Asvestari","R. Vainio","E. K. J. Kilpua","J. Gieseler","A. Kumari","I. C. Jebaraj"],"categories":[],"content":"","date":1709251200,"expirydate":-62135596800,"kind":"page","lang":"en","lastmod":1709244643,"objectID":"b2e43dc6bf31fb6673ffeb59fd142121","permalink":"https://jgieseler.github.io/publication/morosan-2024/","publishdate":"2024-03-01T01:10:42.953291Z","relpermalink":"/publication/morosan-2024/","section":"publication","summary":"*Context.* One of the most prominent sources for energetic particles in our Solar System are huge eruptions of magnetised plasma from the Sun, known as coronal mass ejections (CMEs), which usually drive shocks that accelerate charged particles up to relativistic energies. In particular, energetic electron beams can generate radio bursts through the plasma emission mechanism, for example, type II and accompanying herringbone bursts.*Aims.* In this work, we investigate the acceleration location, escape, and propagation directions of various electron beams in the solar corona and compare them to the arrival of electrons at spacecraft.*Methods.* To track energetic electron beams, we used a synthesis of remote and direct observations combined with coronal modeling. Remote observations include ground-based radio observations from the Nançay Radioheliograph (NRH) combined with space-based extreme-ultraviolet and white-light observations from Solar Dynamics Observatory (SDO), Solar Terrestrial Relations Observatory (STEREO), and Solar Orbiter (SolO). We also used direct observations of energetic electrons from the STEREO and Wind spacecraft. These observations were then combined with a three-dimensional (3D) representation of the electron acceleration locations, including the results of magneto-hydrodynamic models of the solar corona. This representation was subsequently used to investigate the origin of electrons observed remotely at the Sun and their link to in situ electrons.*Results.* We observed a type II radio burst followed by herringbone bursts that show single-frequency movement through time in NRH images. The movement of the type II burst and herringbone radio sources seems to be influenced by regions in the corona where the CME is more capable of driving a shock. We found two clear distinct regions where electrons are accelerated in the low corona and we found spectral differences between the radio emission generated in these regions. We also found similar inferred injection times of near-relativistic electrons at spacecraft to the emission time of the type II and herringbone bursts. However, only the herringbone bursts propagate in a direction where the shock encounters open magnetic field lines that are likely to be magnetically connected to the same spacecraft.*Conclusions.* Our results indicate that if the in situ electrons are indeed shock-accelerated, the most likely origin of the in situ electrons arriving first is located near the acceleration site of herringbone electrons. This is the only region during the early evolution of the shock where there is clear evidence of electron acceleration and an intersection of the shock with open field lines, which can be directly connected to the observing spacecraft.","tags":[],"title":"Connecting remote and in situ observations of shock-accelerated electrons associated with a coronal mass ejection","type":"publication"},{"authors":null,"categories":null,"content":"","date":1704067200,"expirydate":-62135596800,"kind":"page","lang":"en","lastmod":1704067200,"objectID":"7b9cce17d2616107149c388f61245934","permalink":"https://jgieseler.github.io/project/soler/","publishdate":"2024-01-01T00:00:00Z","relpermalink":"/project/soler/","section":"project","summary":"Energetic Solar Eruptions: Data and Analysis Tools","tags":["Coronal Mass Ejection","SEP","Shock","Solar Energetic Particles","SOLER"],"title":"SOLER","type":"project"},{"authors":null,"categories":null,"content":"","date":1704067200,"expirydate":-62135596800,"kind":"page","lang":"en","lastmod":1704067200,"objectID":"67f2df47f92f48ce5a28bbf62a383277","permalink":"https://jgieseler.github.io/project/spearhead/","publishdate":"2024-01-01T00:00:00Z","relpermalink":"/project/spearhead/","section":"project","summary":"Specification, Analysis \u0026 Re-calibration of High Energy Particle Data","tags":["Coronal Mass Ejection","Galactic Cosmic Rays","SEP","Shock","Solar Energetic Particles","SPEARHEAD"],"title":"SPEARHEAD","type":"project"},{"authors":["I. C. Jebaraj","N. Dresing","V. Krasnoselskikh","O. V. Agapitov","J. Gieseler","D. Trotta","N. Wijsen","A. Larosa","A. Kouloumvakos","C. Palmroos","A. Dimmock","A. Kolhoff","P. Kühl","S. Fleth","A. Fedeli","S. Valkila","D. Lario","Yu. V. Khotyaintsev","R. Vainio"],"categories":[],"content":"","date":1702339200,"expirydate":-62135596800,"kind":"page","lang":"en","lastmod":1702390243,"objectID":"8a2ed302a86bd47c28300496c07a34f2","permalink":"https://jgieseler.github.io/publication/jebaraj-2023b/","publishdate":"2023-12-17T14:10:42.953291Z","relpermalink":"/publication/jebaraj-2023b/","section":"publication","summary":"*Context.* Collisionless shock waves have long been considered to be among the most prolific particle accelerators in the universe. Shocks alter the plasma they propagate through, and often exhibit complex evolution across multiple scales. Interplanetary (IP) traveling shocks have been recorded in situ for over half a century and act as a natural laboratory for experimentally verifying various aspects of large-scale collisionless shocks. A fundamentally interesting problem in both heliophysics and astrophysics is the acceleration of electrons to relativistic energies ( 300 keV) by traveling shocks.*Aims.* The reason for an incomplete understanding of electron acceleration at IP shocks is due to scale-related challenges and a lack of instrumental capabilities. This Letter presents the first observations of field-aligned beams of relativistic electrons upstream of an IP shock, observed thanks to the instrumental capabilities of Solar Orbiter. This study presents the characteristics of the electron beams close to the source and contributes to the understanding of their acceleration mechanism.*Methods.* On 25 July 2022, Solar Orbiter encountered an IP shock at 0.98 AU. The shock was associated with an energetic storm particle event, which also featured upstream field-aligned relativistic electron beams observed 14 min prior to the actual shock crossing. The distance of the beam’s origin was investigated using a velocity dispersion analysis (VDA). Peak-intensity energy spectra were anaylzed and compared with those obtained from a semi-analytical fast-Fermi acceleration model.*Results.* By leveraging Solar Orbiter’s high temporal resolution Energetic Particle Detector (EPD), we successfully showcase an IP shock’s ability to accelerate relativistic electron beams. Our proposed acceleration mechanism offers an explanation for the observed electron beam and its characteristics, while we also explore the potential contributions of more complex mechanisms.","tags":[],"title":"Relativistic electron beams accelerated by an interplanetary shock","type":"publication"},{"authors":["I. C. Jebaraj","A. Kouloumvakos","N. Dresing","A. Warmuth","N. Wijsen","C. Palmroos","J. Gieseler","A. Marmyleva","R. Vainio","V. Krupar","T. Wiegelmann","J. Magdalenic","F. Schuller","A. F. Battaglia","A. Fedeli"],"categories":[],"content":"","date":1683590400,"expirydate":-62135596800,"kind":"page","lang":"en","lastmod":1692281443,"objectID":"39292e29c9568b00be35952b684a5ebb","permalink":"https://jgieseler.github.io/publication/jebaraj-2023/","publishdate":"2023-08-17T14:10:42.953291Z","relpermalink":"/publication/jebaraj-2023/","section":"publication","summary":"*Context.* We study the solar energetic particle (SEP) event observed on 9 October 2021 by multiple spacecraft, including Solar Orbiter. The event was associated with an M1.6 flare, a coronal mass ejection, and a shock wave. During the event, high-energy protons and electrons were recorded by multiple instruments located within a narrow longitudinal cone.*Aims.* An interesting aspect of the event was the multi-stage particle energisation during the flare impulsive phase and also what appears to be a separate phase of electron acceleration detected at Solar Orbiter after the flare maximum. We aim to investigate and identify the multiple sources of energetic electron acceleration.*Methods.* We utilised SEP electron observations from the Energetic Particle Detector (EPD) and hard X-ray (HXR) observations from the Spectrometer/Telescope for Imaging X-rays (STIX) on board Solar Orbiter, in combination with radio observations at a broad frequency range. We focused on establishing an association between the energetic electrons and the different HXR and radio emissions associated with the multiple acceleration episodes.*Results.* We find that the flare was able to accelerate electrons for at least 20 min during the non-thermal phase, observed in the form of five discrete HXR pulses. We also show evidence that the shock wave contributed to the electron acceleration during and after the impulsive flare phase. The detailed analysis of EPD electron data shows that there was a time difference in the release of low- and high-energy electrons, with the high-energy release delayed. Also, the observed electron anisotropy characteristics suggest a different connectivity during the two phases of acceleration.","tags":[],"title":"Multiple injections of energetic electrons associated with the flare and CME event on 9 October 2021","type":"publication"},{"authors":["J. Gieseler","N. Dresing","C. Palmroos","J. L. von Forstner","D. J. Price","R. Vainio","A. Kouloumvakos","L. Rodríguez-García","D. Trotta","V. Génot","A. Masson","M. Roth","A. Veronig"],"categories":[],"content":"","date":1677542400,"expirydate":-62135596800,"kind":"page","lang":"en","lastmod":1677596400,"objectID":"8e8ef213984aac801cbfbd01d32a00eb","permalink":"https://jgieseler.github.io/publication/gieseler-2023/","publishdate":"2023-02-28T17:00:00.395038Z","relpermalink":"/publication/gieseler-2023/","section":"publication","summary":"The Solar MAgnetic Connection HAUS1 tool (Solar-MACH) is an open-source tool completely written in Python that derives and visualizes the spatial configuration and solar magnetic connection of different observers (i.e., spacecraft or planets) in the heliosphere at different times. For doing this, the magnetic connection in the interplanetary space is obtained by the classic Parker Heliospheric Magnetic Field (HMF). In close vicinity of the Sun, a Potential Field Source Surface (PFSS) model can be applied to connect the HMF to the solar photosphere. Solar-MACH is especially aimed at providing publication-ready figures for the analyses of Solar Energetic Particle events (SEPs) or solar transients such as Coronal Mass Ejections (CMEs). It is provided as an installable Python package (listed on PyPI and conda-forge), but also as a web tool at solar-mach.github.io that completely runs in any web browser and requires neither Python knowledge nor installation. The development of Solar-MACH is open to everyone and takes place on GitHub, where the source code is publicly available under the BSD 3-Clause License. Established Python libraries like sunpy and pfsspy are utilized to obtain functionalities when possible. In this article, the Python code of Solar-MACH is explained, and its functionality is demonstrated using real science examples. In addition, we introduce the overarching SERPENTINE project, the umbrella under which the recent development took place.","tags":["Python","SEP","SERPENTINE","Solar-MACH","Solar Energetic Particles"],"title":"Solar-MACH: An open-source tool to analyze solar magnetic connection configurations","type":"publication"},{"authors":["N. Dresing","L. Rodríguez-García","I. C. Jebaraj","A. Warmuth","S. Wallace","L. Balmaceda","T. Podladchikova","R. D. Strauss","A. Kouloumvakos","C. Palmroos","V. Krupar","J. Gieseler","Z. Xu","J. G. Mitchell","C. M. S. Cohen","G. A. de Nolfo","E. Palmerio","F. Carcaboso","E. K. J. Kilpua","D. Trotta","U. Auster","E. Asvestari","D. da Silva","W. Dröoge","T. Getachew","R. Gómez-Herrero","M. Grande","D. Heyner","M. Holmström","J. Huovelin","Y. Kartavykh","M. Laurenza","C. O. Lee","G. Mason","M. Maksimovic","J. Mieth","G. Murakami","P. Oleynik","M. Pinto","M. Pulupa","I. Richter","B. Sánchez-Cano","F. Schuller","H. Ueno","R. Vainio","A. Vecchio","A. M. Veronig","N. Wijsen"],"categories":[],"content":"","date":1674000000,"expirydate":-62135596800,"kind":"page","lang":"en","lastmod":1682340880,"objectID":"1ea5895cd02ab4081f0975ea75faa067","permalink":"https://jgieseler.github.io/publication/apr17/","publishdate":"2023-01-18T12:54:38.728184Z","relpermalink":"/publication/apr17/","section":"publication","summary":"*Context.* A complex and long-lasting solar eruption on 17 April 2021 produced a widespread Solar Energetic Particle event (SEP) that was observed by five longitudinally well-separated observers in the inner heliosphere covering distances to the Sun from 0.42 to 1 au: BepiColombo, Parker Solar Probe, Solar Orbiter, STEREO A, and close-to-Earth spacecraft. The event was the second widespread SEP event of solar cycle 25 and produced relativistic electrons and protons. It was associated with a long-lasting solar hard X-ray flare showing multiple hard X-ray peaks over a duration of one hour. The event was further accompanied by a medium fast Coronal Mass Ejection (CME) with a speed of 880 km s −1 driving a shock, an EUV wave as well as long-lasting and complex radio burst activity showing four distinct type III burst groups over a period of 40 minutes.*Aims.* We aim at understanding the reason for the wide SEP spread as well as identifying the underlying source regions of the electron and proton event.*Methods.* A comprehensive multi-spacecraft analysis of remote-sensing observations and in-situ measurements of the energetic particles and interplanetary context is applied to attribute the SEP observations at the different locations to the various potential source regions at the Sun. An ENLIL simulation is used to characterize the complex interplanetary state and its role for the energetic particle transport. The magnetic connection between the spacecraft and the Sun is determined using ballistic backmapping in combination with potential field source surface extrapolations in the lower corona. In combination with a reconstruction of the coronal shock front we then determine the times when the shock establishes magnetic connections with the different observers. Radio observations are used to characterize the directivity of the four main injection episodes, which are then employed in a 2D SEP transport simulation to test the importance of these different injection episodes.*Results.* A comprehensive timing analysis of the inferred solar injection times of the SEPs observed at the different spacecraft suggests different source processes being important for the electron and the proton event. Comparison with characteristics and timing of the potential sources, such as the CME-driven shock or the flare, suggests a stronger shock contribution for the proton event and a more likely flare-related source of the electron event.*Conclusions.* Different to earlier studies on widespread SEP events, we find that in this event an important ingredient for the wide SEP spread was the wide longitudinal range of about 110◦ covered by distinct SEP injections, which is also supported by our SEP transport modeling.","tags":["SEP","SERPENTINE","Solar Energetic Particles","Solar Orbiter"],"title":"The 17 April 2021 widespread solar energetic particle event","type":"publication"},{"authors":["C. Palmroos","J. Gieseler","N. Dresing","D. E. Morosan","E. Asvestari","A. Yli-Laurila","D. J. Price","S. Valkila","R. Vainio"],"categories":[],"content":"","date":1671062400,"expirydate":-62135596800,"kind":"page","lang":"en","lastmod":1671116400,"objectID":"96a35cb0e1d3cde7edb6613596c722d6","permalink":"https://jgieseler.github.io/publication/palmroos-2022/","publishdate":"2022-12-15T17:00:00.395038Z","relpermalink":"/publication/palmroos-2022/","section":"publication","summary":"Solar Energetic Particles (SEPs) are charged particles accelerated within the solar atmosphere or the interplanetary space by explosive phenomena such as solar flares or Coronal Mass Ejections (CMEs). Once injected into the interplanetary space, they can propagate towards Earth, causing space weather related phenomena. For their analysis, interplanetary in situ measurements of charged particles are key. The recently expanded spacecraft fleet in the heliosphere not only provides much-needed additional vantage points, but also increases the variety of missions and instruments for which data loading and processing tools are needed. This manuscript introduces a series of Python functions that will enable the scientific community to download, load, and visualize charged particle measurements of the current space missions that are especially relevant to particle research as time series or dynamic spectra. In addition, further analytical functionality is provided that allows the determination of SEP onset times as well as their inferred injection times. The full workflow, which is intended to be run within Jupyter Notebooks and can also be approachable for Python laymen, will be presented with scientific examples. All functions are written in Python, with the source code publicly available at GitHub under a permissive license. Where appropriate, available Python libraries are used, and their application is described.","tags":["Python","Radio","SEP","SEPpy","SERPENTINE","Solar Energetic Particles"],"title":"Solar energetic particle time series analysis with Python","type":"publication"},{"authors":["D. Trotta","L. Vuorinen","H. Hietala","T. Horbury","N. Dresing","J. Gieseler","A. Kouloumvakos","D. J. Price","F. Valentini","E. Kilpua","R. Vainio"],"categories":[],"content":"","date":1666137600,"expirydate":-62135596800,"kind":"page","lang":"en","lastmod":1666191600,"objectID":"f479418f0298107812ae6e6b800bcf54","permalink":"https://jgieseler.github.io/publication/trotta-2022/","publishdate":"2022-10-19T17:00:00.395038Z","relpermalink":"/publication/trotta-2022/","section":"publication","summary":"Spacecraft missions provide the unique opportunity to study the properties of collisionless shocks utilising in situ measurements. In the past years, several diagnostics have been developed to address key shock parameters using time series of magnetic field (and plasma) data collected by a single spacecraft crossing a shock front. A critical aspect of such diagnostics is the averaging process involved in the evaluation of upstream/downstream quantities. In this work, we discuss several of these techniques, with a particular focus on the shock obliquity (defined as the angle between the upstream magnetic field and the shock normal vector) estimation. We introduce a systematic variation of the upstream/downstream averaging windows, yielding to an ensemble of shock parameters, which is a useful tool to address the robustness of their estimation. This approach is first tested with a synthetic shock dataset compliant with the Rankine-Hugoniot jump conditions for a shock, including the presence of noise and disturbances. We then employ self-consistent, hybrid kinetic shock simulations to apply the diagnostics to virtual spacecraft crossing the shock front at various stages of its evolution, highlighting the role of shock-induced fluctuations in the parameters’ estimation. This approach has the strong advantage of retaining some important properties of collisionless shock (such as, for example, the shock front microstructure) while being able to set a known, nominal set of shock parameters. Finally, two recent observations of interplanetary shocks from the Solar Orbiter spacecraft are presented, to demonstrate the use of this systematic approach to real events of shock crossings. The approach is also tested on an interplanetary shock measured by the four spacecraft of the Magnetospheric Multiscale (MMS) mission. All the Python software developed and used for the diagnostics (SerPyShock) is made available for the public, including an example of parameter estimation for a shock wave recently observed in-situ by the Solar Orbiter spacecraft.","tags":["Coronal Mass Ejection","Python","SERPENTINE","SerPyShock","Shock"],"title":"Single-spacecraft techniques for shock parameters estimation: A systematic approach","type":"publication"},{"authors":["A. Kouloumvakos","R. Vainio","J. Gieseler","D. J. Price"],"categories":[],"content":"","date":1664668800,"expirydate":-62135596800,"kind":"page","lang":"en","lastmod":1664722800,"objectID":"12b50f0b2e403f756cf0c1eb922bdd94","permalink":"https://jgieseler.github.io/publication/kouloumvakos-2022b/","publishdate":"2022-10-02T17:00:00.395038Z","relpermalink":"/publication/kouloumvakos-2022b/","section":"publication","summary":"*Context.* Fast and wide coronal mass ejections (CMEs) and CME-driven shock waves are capable of accelerating solar energetic particles (SEPs) and releasing them in very distant locations in the solar corona and near-Sun interplanetary space. SEP events have a variety of characteristics in their release times and particle anisotropies. In some events, specifics of the SEP release times are thought to be difficult to reconcile with the scenario that a propagating shock wave is responsible for the SEP release. *Aims.* Despite the apparent difficulties posed by the shock scenario, many studies have not considered the properties of the propagating shock waves when making a connection with SEP release. This could probably resolve some of the issues and would help us to delve into and understand more important issues such as the effect of the shock acceleration efficiency on the observed characteristics of the SEP timings and the role of particle transport. This study aims to approach these issues from the shock wave perspective and elucidate some of these aspects. *Methods.* We constructed a simple 2D geometrical model to describe the propagation and longitudinal extension of a disturbance. We used this model to examine the longitudinal extension of the wave front from the eruption site as a function of time, to calculate the connection times as a function of the longitudinal separation angle, and to determine the shock parameters at any connection point. We examined how the kinematic and geometric properties of the disturbance could affect the timings of the SEP releases at different heliolongitudes. *Results.* We show that the extension of a wave close to the solar surface may not always indicate when a magnetic connection is established for the first time. The first connection times depend on both the kinematics and geometry of the propagating wave. A shock-related SEP release process can produce a large event-to-event variation in the relationship between the connection and release times and the separation angle to the eruption site. The evolution of the shock geometry and shock strength at the field lines connected to an observer are important parameters for the observed characteristic of the release times","tags":["Coronal Mass Ejection","HDPmt","Python","SERPENTINE","Shock"],"title":"The effect of shock wave properties on the release timings of solar energetic particles","type":"publication"},{"authors":["A. Kouloumvakos","L. Rodríguez-García","J. Gieseler","D. J. Price","A. Vourlidas","R. Vainio"],"categories":[],"content":"","date":1662422400,"expirydate":-62135596800,"kind":"page","lang":"en","lastmod":1662476400,"objectID":"e94247ace1884e7eb5025dde5a682b2a","permalink":"https://jgieseler.github.io/publication/kouloumvakos-2022a/","publishdate":"2022-09-06T17:00:00.395038Z","relpermalink":"/publication/kouloumvakos-2022a/","section":"publication","summary":"PyThea is a newly developed open-source Python software package that provides tools to reconstruct coronal mass ejections (CMEs) and shocks waves in three dimensions, using multi-spacecraft remote-sensing observations. In this article, we introduce PyThea to the scientific community and provide an overview of the main functionality of the core software package and the web application. This package has been fully built in Python, with extensive use of libraries available within this language ecosystem. PyThea package provides a web application that can be used to reconstruct CMEs and shock waves. The application automatically retrieves and processes remote-sensing observations, and visualizes the imaging data that can be used for the analysis. Thanks to PyThea, the three-dimensional reconstruction of CMEs and shock waves is an easy task, with final products ready for publication. The package provides three widely used geometrical models for the reconstruction of CMEs and shocks, namely, the graduated cylindrical shell (GCS) and an ellipsoid/spheroid model. It also provides tools to process the final fittings and calculate the kinematics. The final fitting products can also be exported and reused at any time. The source code of PyThea package can be found in GitHub and Zenodo under the GNU General Public License v3.0. In this article, we present details for PyThea‘s python package structure and its core functionality, and we show how this can be used to perform three-dimensional reconstruction of coronal mass ejections and shock waves.","tags":["Coronal Mass Ejection","Python","PyThea","SERPENTINE"],"title":"PyThea: An open-source software package to perform 3D reconstruction of coronal mass ejections and shock waves","type":"publication"},{"authors":["A. Papaioannou","A. Kouloumvakos","A. Mishev","R. Vainio","I. Usoskin","K. Herbst","A. P. Rouillard","A. Anastasiadis","J. Gieseler","R. Wimmer-Schweingruber","P. Kühl"],"categories":[],"content":"","date":1644796800,"expirydate":-62135596800,"kind":"page","lang":"en","lastmod":1652194800,"objectID":"5c85b939e5a823f2d31d1c98c2d16f9f","permalink":"https://jgieseler.github.io/publication/papaioannou-2022/","publishdate":"2022-02-14T00:00:00Z","relpermalink":"/publication/papaioannou-2022/","section":"publication","summary":"*Aims.* The first relativistic solar proton event of solar cycle 25 was detected on 28 October 2021 by neutron monitors (NMs) on the ground and particle detectors on board spacecraft in near-Earth space. This is the first ground-level enhancement (GLE) of the current cycle. A detailed reconstruction of the NM response together with the identification of the solar eruption that generated these particles is investigated based on in situ and remote-sensing measurements. *Methods.* In situ proton observations from a few MeV to ∼500 MeV were combined with the detection of a solar flare in soft X-rays, a coronal mass ejection, radio bursts, and extreme ultraviolet (EUV) observations to identify the solar origin of the GLE. Timing analysis was performed, and a relation to the solar sources was outlined. *Results.* GLE73 reached a maximum particle rigidity of ∼2.4 GV and is associated with type III, type II, and type IV radio bursts and an EUV wave. A diversity of time profiles recorded by NMs was observed. This points to the event having an anisotropic nature. The peak flux at E 10 MeV was only ∼30 pfu and remained at this level for several days. The release time of ≥1 GV particles was found to be ∼15:40 UT. GLE73 had a moderately hard rigidity spectrum at very high energies (γ ∼ 5.5). Comparison of GLE73 to previous GLEs with similar solar drivers is performed.","tags":["Coronal Mass Ejection","SEP","SERPENTINE","Solar Energetic Particles","Solar Orbiter"],"title":"The first ground-level enhancement of solar cycle 25 on 28 October 2021","type":"publication"},{"authors":["E. K. J. Kilpua","S. W. Good","N. Dresing","R. Vainio","E. E. Davies","R. J. Forsyth","J. Gieseler","B. Lavraud","E. Asvestari","D. Morosan","J. Pomoell","D. Price","D. Heyener","T. S. Horbury","V. Angelini","H. O'Brien","V. Evans","J. Rodriguez-Pacheco","R. Gómez Herrero","G. Ho","R. Wimmer-Schweingruber"],"categories":[],"content":"","date":1639440000,"expirydate":-62135596800,"kind":"page","lang":"en","lastmod":1639507036,"objectID":"99ac28a481bb5719ba64a71a58897d98","permalink":"https://jgieseler.github.io/publication/kilpua-2021/","publishdate":"2021-12-14T18:37:16.395038Z","relpermalink":"/publication/kilpua-2021/","section":"publication","summary":"*Context.* Sheath regions ahead of coronal mass ejections (CMEs) are large-scale heliospheric structures that form gradually with CME expansion and propagation from the Sun. Turbulent and compressed sheaths could contribute to the acceleration of charged particles in the corona and in interplanetary space, but the relation of their internal structure to the particle energization process is still a relatively little studied subject. In particular, the role of sheaths in accelerating particles when the shock Mach number is low is a significant open research problem. *Aims.* This work seeks to provide new insights on the internal structure of CME-driven sheaths with regard to energetic particle enhancements. A good opportunity to achieve this aim was provided by multi-point, in-situ observations of a sheath region made by radially aligned spacecraft at 0.8 and ∼1 AU (Solar Orbiter, the L1 spacecraft Wind and ACE, and BepiColombo) on April 19−21, 2020. The sheath was preceded by a weak and slowly propagating fast-mode shock. *Methods.* We apply a range of analysis techniques to in situ magnetic field, plasma and particle observations. The study focuses on smaller scale sheath structures and magnetic field fluctuations that coincide with energetic ion enhancements. *Results.* Energetic ion enhancements were identified in the sheath, but at different locations within the sheath structure at Solar Orbiter and L1. Magnetic fluctuation amplitudes at inertial-range scales increased in the sheath relative to the solar wind upstream of the shock, as is typically observed. However, when normalised to the local mean field, fluctuation amplitudes did not increase significantly; magnetic compressibility of fluctuation also did not increase within the sheath. Various substructures were found to be embedded within the sheath at the different spacecraft, including multiple heliospheric current sheet (HCS) crossings and a small-scale flux rope. At L1, the ion flux enhancement was associated with the HCS crossings, while at Solar Orbiter, the ion enhancement occurred within a compressed, small-scale flux rope. *Conclusions.* Several internal smaller-scale substructures and clear difference in their occurrence and properties between the used spacecraft was identified within the analyzed CME-driven sheath. These substructures are favourable locations for the energization of charged particles in interplanetary space. In particular, substructures that are swept from the upstream solar wind and compressed into the sheath can act as effective acceleration sites. A possible acceleration mechanism is betatron acceleration associated with a small-scale flux rope and warped HCS compressed in the sheath, while the contribution of shock acceleration to the latter cannot be excluded.","tags":["Coronal Mass Ejection","SEP","SERPENTINE","Solar Energetic Particles","Solar Orbiter"],"title":"Multi-spacecraft observations of the structure of the sheath of an interplanetary coronal mass ejection and related energetic ion enhancement","type":"publication"},{"authors":null,"categories":null,"content":"The Solar MAgnetic Connection Haus (Solar-MACH) tool is a multi-spacecraft longitudinal configuration plotter. It was originally developed at the University of Kiel, Germany, and further discussed within the ESA Heliophysics Archives USer (HAUS) group. It is now openly developed at GitHub.\nThe main functionality is provided through a Python package available at PyPI and conda-forge. In addition, a Streamlit version is available that allows to access most functionalities as a web-app at solar-mach.github.io.\nIf you want to cite Solar-MACH or learn more about it, please refer to the publication Gieseler et al. (2023)!\nPowered by: \n","date":1623715200,"expirydate":-62135596800,"kind":"page","lang":"en","lastmod":1623715200,"objectID":"5591828056d3e98849aa827031a0ad24","permalink":"https://jgieseler.github.io/project/solar-mach/","publishdate":"2021-06-15T00:00:00Z","relpermalink":"/project/solar-mach/","section":"project","summary":"Multi-spacecraft longitudinal configuration plotter","tags":["SEP","Solar Energetic Particles","SERPENTINE"],"title":"Solar-MACH","type":"project"},{"authors":["J. Praks","M. Rizwan Mughal","R. Vainio","P. Janhunen","J. Envall","P. Oleynik","A. Näsilä","H. Leppinen","P. Niemelä","A. Slavinskis","J. Gieseler","P. Toivanen","T. Tikka","T. Peltola","A. Bosser","G. Schwarzkopf","N. Jovanovic","B. Riwanto","A. Kestilä","A. Punkkinen","R. Punkkinen","H. -P. Hedman","T. Säntti","J. -O. Lill","J. M. K. Slotte","H. Kettunen","A. Virtanen"],"categories":[],"content":"","date":1609459200,"expirydate":-62135596800,"kind":"page","lang":"en","lastmod":1616438236,"objectID":"5cd200e49f4967d611959a222d6a1e6f","permalink":"https://jgieseler.github.io/publication/praks-2021/","publishdate":"2021-03-22T18:37:16.395038Z","relpermalink":"/publication/praks-2021/","section":"publication","summary":"The design, integration, testing and launch of the first Finnish satellite Aalto-1 is briefly presented in this paper. Aalto-1, a three-unit CubeSat, launched into Sun-synchronous polar orbit at an altitude of approximately 500 km, is operational since June 2017. It carries three experimental payloads: Aalto Spectral Imager(AaSI), Radiation Monitor (RADMON) and Electrostatic Plasma Brake (EPB). AaSI is a hyperspectral imager in visible and near-infrared (NIR) wavelength bands, RADMON is an energetic particle detector and EPB is a de-orbiting technology demonstration payload. The platform was designed to accommodate multiple payloads while ensuring sufficient data, power, radio, mechanical and electrical interfaces. The design strategy of platform and payload subsystems consists of in-house development and commercial subsystems. The CubeSat Assembly, Integration \u0026 Test (AIT) followed Flatsat-Engineering-Qualication Model (EQM)-Flight Model (FM) model philosophy for qualification and acceptance. The paper briefly describes the design approach of platform and payload subsystems, their integration and test campaigns and spacecraft launch. The paper also describes the ground segment \u0026 services that were developed by Aalto-1 team.","tags":["Aalto-1","CubeSat","Hyperspectral","Aalto spectral imager","Radiation Monitor (RADMON)","Electrostatic plasma brake"],"title":"Aalto-1, multi-payload CubeSat: Design, integration and launch","type":"publication"},{"authors":["M. Rizwan Mughal","J. Praks","R. Vainio","P. Janhunen","J. Envall","A. Näsilä","P. Oleynik","P. Niemelä","A. Slavinskis","J. Gieseler","N. Jovanovic","B. Riwanto","P. Toivanen","H. Leppinen","T. Tikka","A. Punkkinen","R. Punkkinen","H. -P. Hedman","J. -O. Lill","J. M. K. Slotte"],"categories":[],"content":"","date":1609459200,"expirydate":-62135596800,"kind":"page","lang":"en","lastmod":1616438236,"objectID":"cebdc8cd928a8ea4cefe7899c8e6471c","permalink":"https://jgieseler.github.io/publication/mughal-2021/","publishdate":"2021-03-22T18:37:16.246824Z","relpermalink":"/publication/mughal-2021/","section":"publication","summary":"The in-orbit results and lessons learned of the first Finnish satellite Aalto-1 are briefly presented in this paper. Aalto-1, a three-unit CubeSat which was launched in June 2017, performed Aalto Spectral Imager (AaSI), Radiation Monitor (RADMON) and Electrostatic Plasma Brake (EPB) missions. The satellite partly fulfilled its mission objectives and allowed to either perform or attempt the experiments. Although attitude control was partially functional, AaSI and RADMON were able to acquire valuable measurements. EPB was successfully commissioned but the tether deployment was not successful. In this paper, we present the intended mission, in-orbit experience in operating and troubleshooting the satellite, an overview of experiment results, as well as lessons learned that will be used in future missions.","tags":["Aalto-1","CubeSat","In-orbit results","Lessons learned","Aalto Spectral Imager","Radiation Monitor (RADMON)","Electrostatic Plasma Brake"],"title":"Aalto-1, multi-payload CubeSat: In-orbit results and lessons learned","type":"publication"},{"authors":null,"categories":null,"content":"","date":1609459200,"expirydate":-62135596800,"kind":"page","lang":"en","lastmod":1609459200,"objectID":"49400bbc72ed989d486045ba963ffbf7","permalink":"https://jgieseler.github.io/project/serpentine/","publishdate":"2021-01-01T00:00:00Z","relpermalink":"/project/serpentine/","section":"project","summary":"Solar energetic particle analysis platform for the inner heliosphere","tags":["SEP","Solar Energetic Particles","SERPENTINE"],"title":"SERPENTINE","type":"project"},{"authors":["Philipp Oleynik","Rami Vainio","Arttu Punkkinen","Oleksiy Dudnik","Jan Gieseler","Hannu-Pekka Hedman","Heli Hietala","Edward Hæggström","Petri Niemelä","Juhani Peltonen","Jaan Praks","Risto Punkkinen","Tero Säntti","Eino Valtonen"],"categories":[],"content":"","date":1593561600,"expirydate":-62135596800,"kind":"page","lang":"en","lastmod":1616438236,"objectID":"277f37fa3724d142c3dc5d58d0bca369","permalink":"https://jgieseler.github.io/publication/oleynik-2020/","publishdate":"2021-03-22T18:37:16.542085Z","relpermalink":"/publication/oleynik-2020/","section":"publication","summary":"RADMON is a small radiation monitor designed and assembled by students of University of Turku and University of Helsinki. It is flown on-board Aalto-1, a 3-unit CubeSat in low Earth orbit at about 500 km altitude. The detector unit of the instrument consists of two detectors, a Si solid-state detector and a CsI(Tl) scintillator, and utilizes the ΔE-E technique to determine the total energy and species of each particle hitting the detector. We present the results of the on-ground and in-flight calibration campaigns of the instrument, as well as the characterization of its response through extensive simulations within the Geant4 framework. The overall energy calibration margin achieved is about 5%. The full instrument response to protons and electrons is presented and the issue of proton contamination of the electron channels is quantified and discussed.","tags":["Aalto-1","CubeSat","Radiation Monitor (RADMON)"],"title":"Calibration of RADMON radiation monitor onboard Aalto-1 CubeSat","type":"publication"},{"authors":["Jan Gieseler","Philipp Oleynik","Heli Hietala","Rami Vainio","Hannu-Pekka Hedman","Juhani Peltonen","Arttu Punkkinen","Risto Punkkinen","Tero Säntti","Edward Hæggström","Jaan Praks","Petri Niemelä","Bagus Riwanto","Nemanja Jovanovic","M. Rizwan Mughal"],"categories":[],"content":"","date":1593561600,"expirydate":-62135596800,"kind":"page","lang":"en","lastmod":1616438236,"objectID":"7c48153d86e5f8c02c15d700bf6fe20c","permalink":"https://jgieseler.github.io/publication/gieseler-2020/","publishdate":"2021-03-22T18:37:16.685849Z","relpermalink":"/publication/gieseler-2020/","section":"publication","summary":"The Radiation Monitor (RADMON) on-board Aalto-1 CubeSat is an energetic particle detector that fulfills the requirements of small size, low power consumption and low budget. Aalto-1 was launched on 23 June 2017 to a sun-synchronous polar orbit with 97.4° inclination and an average altitude of somewhat above 500 km. RADMON has been measuring integral particle intensities from October 2017 to May 2018 with electron energies starting at low-MeV and protons from 10 MeV upwards. In this paper, we present first electron and proton intensity maps obtained over the mission period. In addition, the response of RADMON measurements to magnetospheric dynamics are analyzed, and the electron observations are compared with corresponding measurements by the PROBA-V/EPT mission. Finally, we describe the RADMON data set, which is made publicly available.","tags":["Aalto-1","CubeSat","Radiation Monitor (RADMON)"],"title":"Radiation monitor RADMON aboard Aalto-1 CubeSat: First results","type":"publication"},{"authors":null,"categories":null,"content":"Lorem ipsum dolor sit amet, consectetur adipiscing elit. Duis posuere tellus ac convallis placerat. Proin tincidunt magna sed ex sollicitudin condimentum. Sed ac faucibus dolor, scelerisque sollicitudin nisi. Cras purus urna, suscipit quis sapien eu, pulvinar tempor diam. Quisque risus orci, mollis id ante sit amet, gravida egestas nisl. Sed ac tempus magna. Proin in dui enim. Donec condimentum, sem id dapibus fringilla, tellus enim condimentum arcu, nec volutpat est felis vel metus. Vestibulum sit amet erat at nulla eleifend gravida.\nNullam vel molestie justo. Curabitur vitae efficitur leo. In hac habitasse platea dictumst. Sed pulvinar mauris dui, eget varius purus congue ac. Nulla euismod, lorem vel elementum dapibus, nunc justo porta mi, sed tempus est est vel tellus. Nam et enim eleifend, laoreet sem sit amet, elementum sem. Morbi ut leo congue, maximus velit ut, finibus arcu. In et libero cursus, rutrum risus non, molestie leo. Nullam congue quam et volutpat malesuada. Sed risus tortor, pulvinar et dictum nec, sodales non mi. Phasellus lacinia commodo laoreet. Nam mollis, erat in feugiat consectetur, purus eros egestas tellus, in auctor urna odio at nibh. Mauris imperdiet nisi ac magna convallis, at rhoncus ligula cursus.\nCras aliquam rhoncus ipsum, in hendrerit nunc mattis vitae. Duis vitae efficitur metus, ac tempus leo. Cras nec fringilla lacus. Quisque sit amet risus at ipsum pharetra commodo. Sed aliquam mauris at consequat eleifend. Praesent porta, augue sed viverra bibendum, neque ante euismod ante, in vehicula justo lorem ac eros. Suspendisse augue libero, venenatis eget tincidunt ut, malesuada at lorem. Donec vitae bibendum arcu. Aenean maximus nulla non pretium iaculis. Quisque imperdiet, nulla in pulvinar aliquet, velit quam ultrices quam, sit amet fringilla leo sem vel nunc. Mauris in lacinia lacus.\nSuspendisse a tincidunt lacus. Curabitur at urna sagittis, dictum ante sit amet, euismod magna. Sed rutrum massa id tortor commodo, vitae elementum turpis tempus. Lorem ipsum dolor sit amet, consectetur adipiscing elit. Aenean purus turpis, venenatis a ullamcorper nec, tincidunt et massa. Integer posuere quam rutrum arcu vehicula imperdiet. Mauris ullamcorper quam vitae purus congue, quis euismod magna eleifend. Vestibulum semper vel augue eget tincidunt. Fusce eget justo sodales, dapibus odio eu, ultrices lorem. Duis condimentum lorem id eros commodo, in facilisis mauris scelerisque. Morbi sed auctor leo. Nullam volutpat a lacus quis pharetra. Nulla congue rutrum magna a ornare.\nAliquam in turpis accumsan, malesuada nibh ut, hendrerit justo. Cum sociis natoque penatibus et magnis dis parturient montes, nascetur ridiculus mus. Quisque sed erat nec justo posuere suscipit. Donec ut efficitur arcu, in malesuada neque. Nunc dignissim nisl massa, id vulputate nunc pretium nec. Quisque eget urna in risus suscipit ultricies. Pellentesque odio odio, tincidunt in eleifend sed, posuere a diam. Nam gravida nisl convallis semper elementum. Morbi vitae felis faucibus, vulputate orci placerat, aliquet nisi. Aliquam erat volutpat. Maecenas sagittis pulvinar purus, sed porta quam laoreet at.\n","date":1577836800,"expirydate":-62135596800,"kind":"page","lang":"en","lastmod":1577836800,"objectID":"4a3cc84f65cb2db3a9e65cbde99aa1b5","permalink":"https://jgieseler.github.io/project/foresail/","publishdate":"2020-01-01T00:00:00Z","relpermalink":"/project/foresail/","section":"project","summary":"Finnish Centre of Excellence in Research of Sustainable Space","tags":["CubeSat","FORESAIL"],"title":"FORESAIL","type":"project"},{"authors":null,"categories":null,"content":"You can find the public data set of RADiation MONitor (RADMON) measurements of energetic charged particles (electrons and protons) onboard the 1st Finnish CubeSat Aalto-1 in Low Eart Orbit (LEO) in 2017-2018 here at Zenodo.\n","date":1573776000,"expirydate":-62135596800,"kind":"page","lang":"en","lastmod":1573776000,"objectID":"8998bc66a6137ce45d31fa7fae5d2a03","permalink":"https://jgieseler.github.io/project/radmon/","publishdate":"2019-11-15T00:00:00Z","relpermalink":"/project/radmon/","section":"project","summary":"Public data set of RADiation MONitor (RADMON) measurements onboard the 1st Finnish CubeSat Aalto-1","tags":["CubeSat","Aalto-1","Radiation Monitor (RADMON)"],"title":"Aalto-1/RADMON data set 2017/2018","type":"project"},{"authors":[],"categories":[],"content":"Create slides in Markdown with Wowchemy Wowchemy | Documentation\n Features Efficiently write slides in Markdown 3-in-1: Create, Present, and Publish your slides Supports speaker notes Mobile friendly slides Controls Next: Right Arrow or Space Previous: Left Arrow Start: Home Finish: End Overview: Esc Speaker notes: S Fullscreen: F Zoom: Alt + Click PDF Export: E Code Highlighting Inline code: variable\nCode block:\nporridge = \u0026quot;blueberry\u0026quot; if porridge == \u0026quot;blueberry\u0026quot;: print(\u0026quot;Eating...\u0026quot;) Math In-line math: $x + y = z$\nBlock math:\n$$ f\\left( x \\right) = ;\\frac{{2\\left( {x + 4} \\right)\\left( {x - 4} \\right)}}{{\\left( {x + 4} \\right)\\left( {x + 1} \\right)}} $$\n Fragments Make content appear incrementally\n{{% fragment %}} One {{% /fragment %}} {{% fragment %}} **Two** {{% /fragment %}} {{% fragment %}} Three {{% /fragment %}} Press Space to play!\nOne **Two** Three A fragment can accept two optional parameters:\n class: use a custom style (requires definition in custom CSS) weight: sets the order in which a fragment appears Speaker Notes Add speaker notes to your presentation\n{{% speaker_note %}} - Only the speaker can read these notes - Press `S` key to view {{% /speaker_note %}} Press the S key to view the speaker notes!\n Only the speaker can read these notes Press S key to view Themes black: Black background, white text, blue links (default) white: White background, black text, blue links league: Gray background, white text, blue links beige: Beige background, dark text, brown links sky: Blue background, thin dark text, blue links night: Black background, thick white text, orange links serif: Cappuccino background, gray text, brown links simple: White background, black text, blue links solarized: Cream-colored background, dark green text, blue links Custom Slide Customize the slide style and background\n{{\u0026lt; slide background-image=\u0026quot;/media/boards.jpg\u0026quot; \u0026gt;}} {{\u0026lt; slide background-color=\u0026quot;#0000FF\u0026quot; \u0026gt;}} {{\u0026lt; slide class=\u0026quot;my-style\u0026quot; \u0026gt;}} Custom CSS Example Let\u0026rsquo;s make headers navy colored.\nCreate assets/css/reveal_custom.css with:\n.reveal section h1, .reveal section h2, .reveal section h3 { color: navy; } Questions? Ask\nDocumentation\n","date":1549324800,"expirydate":-62135596800,"kind":"page","lang":"en","lastmod":1549324800,"objectID":"0e6de1a61aa83269ff13324f3167c1a9","permalink":"https://jgieseler.github.io/slides/example/","publishdate":"2019-02-05T00:00:00Z","relpermalink":"/slides/example/","section":"slides","summary":"An introduction to using Wowchemy's Slides feature.","tags":[],"title":"Slides","type":"slides"},{"authors":["M. Palmroth","J. Praks","R. Vainio","P. Janhunen","E.K.J. Kilpua","A. Afanasiev","M. Ala-Lahti","A. Alho","T. Asikainen","E. Asvestari","M. Battarbee","A. Binios","A. Bosser","T. Brito","M. Dubart","J. Envall","U. Ganse","N.Y. Ganushkina","H. George","J. Gieseler","S. Good","M. Grandin","S. Haslam","H.-P. Hedman","H. Hietala","N. Jovanovic","S. Kakakhel","M. Kalliokoski","V.V. Kettunen","T. Koskela","E. Lumme","M. Meskanen","D. Morosan","M.R. Mughal","P. Niemelä","S. Nyman","P. Oleynik","A. Osmane","E. Palmerio","J. Peltonen","Y. Pfau-Kempf","J. Plosila","J. Polkko","S. Poluianov","J. Pomoell","D. Price","A. Punkkinen","R. Punkkinen","B. Riwanto","L. Salomaa","A. Slavinskis","T. Säntti","J. Tammi","H. Tenhunen","P. Toivanen","J. Tuominen","L. Turc","E. Valtonen","P. Virtanen","T. Westerlund"],"categories":[],"content":"","date":1546300800,"expirydate":-62135596800,"kind":"page","lang":"en","lastmod":1616438236,"objectID":"cd08b93fac912919cfd70fb4ceea1666","permalink":"https://jgieseler.github.io/publication/palmroth-2019/","publishdate":"2021-03-22T18:37:16.834223Z","relpermalink":"/publication/palmroth-2019/","section":"publication","summary":"Today, the near‐Earth space is facing a paradigm change as the number of new spacecraft is literally skyrocketing. Increasing numbers of small satellites threaten the sustainable use of space, as without removal, space debris will eventually make certain critical orbits unusable. A central factor affecting small spacecraft health and leading to debris is the radiation environment, which is unpredictable due to an incomplete understanding of the near‐Earth radiation environment itself and its variability driven by the solar wind and outer magnetosphere. This paper presents the FORESAIL‐1 nanosatellite mission, having two scientific and one technological objectives. The first scientific objective is to measure the energy and flux of energetic particle loss to the atmosphere with a representative energy and pitch angle resolution over a wide range of magnetic local times. To pave the way to novel model‐in situ data comparisons, we also show preliminary results on precipitating electron fluxes obtained with the new global hybrid‐Vlasov simulation Vlasiator. The second scientific objective of the FORESAIL‐1 mission is to measure energetic neutral atoms of solar origin. The solar energetic neutral atom flux has the potential to contribute importantly to the knowledge of solar eruption energy budget estimations. The technological objective is to demonstrate a satellite deorbiting technology, and for the first time, make an orbit maneuver with a propellantless nanosatellite. FORESAIL‐1 will demonstrate the potential for nanosatellites to make important scientific contributions as well as promote the sustainable utilization of space by using a cost‐efficient deorbiting technology.","tags":["FORESAIL","CubeSat","PATE","Electrostatic Plasma Brake"],"title":"FORESAIL-1 CubeSat Mission to Measure Radiation Belt Losses and Demonstrate Deorbiting","type":"publication"},{"authors":null,"categories":null,"content":"This is a copy of the Supporting Information for Gieseler et al. (2017).\nThis data set (download at buttom of page) contains the solar modulation potential values in MV for monthly intervals from 1973-2017 derived from the proton proxies IMP-8 He and ACE/CRIS C (Phi_pp), and from Usoskin et al. (2011) as provided by http://cosmicrays.oulu.fi/phi/phi.html (Phi_Uso11). It can be used to calculate the rigidity-dependent solar modulation potential φ(P) for monthly intervals from 1973-2017 following Eq. 10 of Gieseler et al. (2017). The uncertainties of Phi_pp are given in column 4, those of Phi_Uso11 are 26 MV for the observed period. The LIS used to calculate the modulation potentials is that from Burger et al. (2000) as given by Usoskin et al. (2005).\n Column 1: Fractional year (start of interval) Column 2: Month Column 3: Phi_pp /MV Column 4: Uncertainty of Phi_pp /MV Column 5: Phi_Uso11 /MV If you use this data, please refer to and cite BOTH following publications:\n Gieseler, J., B. Heber, and K. Herbst, An empirical modification of the force field approach to describe the modulation of galactic cosmic rays close to Earth in a broad range of rigidities, J. Geophys. Res., 2017 (doi:10.1002/2017JA024763).\n Usoskin, I. G., G. A. Bazilevskaya, and G. A. Kovaltsov, Solar modulation parameter for cosmic rays since 1936 reconstructed from ground-based neutron monitors and ionization chambers, J. Geophys. Res., 116, A02104, 2011 (doi:10.1029/2010JA016105).\n DOWNLOAD DATA Zenodo mirror ","date":1509321600,"expirydate":-62135596800,"kind":"page","lang":"en","lastmod":1509321600,"objectID":"0eeb9abc923c431a22e92d65a5a2299c","permalink":"https://jgieseler.github.io/project/forcefield/","publishdate":"2017-10-30T00:00:00Z","relpermalink":"/project/forcefield/","section":"project","summary":"Data set of monthly solar modulation potential values (1973-2017) derived from 1.28 GV proton proxies IMP-8 He and ACE/CRIS C","tags":["Force Field","Galactic Cosmic Rays","Solar Modulation"],"title":"Solar modulation potential based on proton proxies","type":"project"},{"authors":["J. Gieseler","B. Heber","K. Herbst"],"categories":[],"content":"","date":1483228800,"expirydate":-62135596800,"kind":"page","lang":"en","lastmod":1616438237,"objectID":"23975d03c497ee38cf367033dd7a39e3","permalink":"https://jgieseler.github.io/publication/gieseler-2017/","publishdate":"2021-03-22T18:37:16.98228Z","relpermalink":"/publication/gieseler-2017/","section":"publication","summary":"On their way through the heliosphere, galactic cosmic rays (GCRs) are modulated by various effects before they can be detected at Earth. This process can be described by the Parker equation, which calculates the phase space distribution of GCRs depending on the main modulation processes: convection, drifts, diffusion, and adiabatic energy changes. A first-order approximation of this equation is the force field approach, reducing it to a one-parameter dependency, the solar modulation potential ϕ. Utilizing this approach, it is possible to reconstruct ϕ from ground-based and spacecraft measurements. However, it has been shown previously that ϕ depends not only on the local interstellar spectrum (LIS) but also on the energy range of interest. We have investigated this energy dependence further, using published proton intensity spectra obtained by PAMELA and heavier nuclei measurements from IMP-8 and ACE/CRIS. Our results show severe limitations at lower energies including a strong dependence on the solar magnetic epoch. Based on these findings, we will outline a new tool to describe GCR proton spectra in the energy range from a few hundred MeV to tens of GeV over the last solar cycles. In order to show the importance of our modification, we calculate the global production rates of the cosmogenic radionuclide 10 Be which is a proxy for the solar activity ranging back thousands of years.","tags":["Galactic Cosmic Rays","Force Field","Solar Modulation"],"title":"An Empirical Modification of the Force Field Approach to Describe the Modulation of Galactic Cosmic Rays Close to Earth in a Broad Range of Rigidities","type":"publication"},{"authors":["J. Gieseler","B. Heber"],"categories":[],"content":"","date":1462060800,"expirydate":-62135596800,"kind":"page","lang":"en","lastmod":1616438237,"objectID":"49c8965d8b06dddc1808ba52f2dae449","permalink":"https://jgieseler.github.io/publication/gieseler-2016/","publishdate":"2021-03-22T18:37:17.131243Z","relpermalink":"/publication/gieseler-2016/","section":"publication","summary":"*Context.* During the transition from solar cycle 23 to 24 from 2006 to 2009, the Sun was in an unusual solar minimum with very low activity over a long period. These exceptional conditions included a very low interplanetary magnetic field (IMF) strength and a high tilt angle, which both play an important role in the modulation of galactic cosmic rays (GCR) in the heliosphere. Thus, the radial and latitudinal gradients of GCRs are very much expected to depend not only on the solar magnetic epoch, but also on the overall modulation level.\n*Aims.* We determine the non-local radial and the latitudinal gradients of protons in the rigidity range from ~0.45 to 2 GV.\n*Methods.* This was accomplished by using data from the satellite-borne experiment Payload for Antimatter Matter Exploration and Light-nuclei Astrophysics (PAMELA) at Earth and the Kiel Electron Telescope (KET) onboard Ulysses on its highly inclined Keplerian orbit around the Sun with the aphelion at Jupiter’s orbit.\n*Results.* In comparison to the previous A 0 solar magnetic epoch, we find that the absolute value of the latitudinal gradient is lower at higher and higher at lower rigidities. This energy dependence is therefore a crucial test for models that describe the cosmic ray transport in the inner heliosphere.","tags":["Gradients","Galactic Cosmic Rays","Solar Modulation"],"title":"Spatial gradients of GCR protons in the inner heliosphere derived from Ulysses COSPIN/KET and PAMELA measurements","type":"publication"},{"authors":["P. Kühl","N. Dresing","J. Gieseler","B. Heber","A. Klassen"],"categories":[],"content":"","date":1420070400,"expirydate":-62135596800,"kind":"page","lang":"en","lastmod":1616438237,"objectID":"26e8ba551f95b7ac7e83ed587b418a5f","permalink":"https://jgieseler.github.io/publication/kuehl-2015/","publishdate":"2021-03-22T18:37:17.27776Z","relpermalink":"/publication/kuehl-2015/","section":"publication","summary":"The solar modulation of galactic cosmic rays (GCR) can be studied in detail by long term vari-ations of the GCR energy spectrum (e.g. on the scales of a solar cycle). With almost 20 yearsof data, the Electron Proton Helium INstrument (EPHIN) aboard SOHO is well suited for thesekind of investigations. Although the design of the instrument is optimized to measure proton andhelium isotope spectra up to 50 MeV/nucleon the capability exists that allow to determine energyspectra up to above 300 MeV/nucleon. Therefore we developed a sophisticated inversion methodto calculate such proton spectra. The method relies on a GEANT4 Monte Carlo simulation ofthe instrument and a simplified spacecraft model that calculates the energy response function ofEPHIN for electrons, protons and heavier ions. In order to determine the energy spectra the result-ing inversion problem is solved numerically. As a result we present galactic cosmic ray spectrafrom 2006-2009. For validation, the derived spectra are compared to those determined by thePAMELA instrument.","tags":["Galactic Cosmic Rays","Solar Modulation"],"title":"Galactic cosmic ray quiet time spectra from 300 MeV up to above 1 GeV measured with SOHO/EPHIN","type":"publication"},{"authors":["B. Heber","D. Galsdorf","K. Herbst","J. Gieseler","J. Labrenz","C. Schwerdt","M. Walter","G. Benadé","R. Fuchs","H. Krüger","H. Moraal"],"categories":[],"content":"","date":1420070400,"expirydate":-62135596800,"kind":"page","lang":"en","lastmod":1616438237,"objectID":"cd917b7bc36604873688f029e3e5d54d","permalink":"https://jgieseler.github.io/publication/heber-2015/","publishdate":"2021-03-22T18:37:17.42475Z","relpermalink":"/publication/heber-2015/","section":"publication","summary":"Neutron monitors (NMs) are ground-based devices to measure the variation of cosmic ray intensities, and although being reliable they have two disadvantages: their size as well as their weight. As consequence, [1] suggested the development of a portable, and thus much smaller and lighter, calibration neutron monitor that can be carried to any existing station around the world [see 2; 3]. But this mini neutron monitor, moreover, can also be installed as an autonomous station at any location that provides ''office\\\" conditions such as a) temperatures within the range of around 0 to less than 40 degree C as well as b) internet and c) power supply. However, the best location is when the material above the NM is minimized. In 2011 a mini Neutron Monitor was installed at the Neumayer III station in Antarctica as well as the German research vessel Polarstern, providing scientific data since January 2014 and October 2012, respectively. The Polarstern, which is in the possession of the Federal Republic of Germany represented by the Ministry of Education and Research and operated by the Alfred Wegener Institute, Helmholtz Centre for Polar and Marine Research and managed by the shipping company Laeisz, was specially designed for working in the polar seas and is currently one of the most sophisticated polar research vessels worldwide. It spends almost 310 days a year at sea usually being located in the waters of Antarctica between November and March while spending the northern summer months in Arctic waters. Therefore, the vessel scans the rigidity range below the atmospheric threshold and above 10 GV twice a year. In contrast to spacecraft measurements NM data are influenced by variations of the geomagnetic field as well as the atmospheric conditions. Thus, in order to interpret the data a detailed knowledge of the instrument sensitivity with geomagnetic latitude (rigidity) and atmospheric pressure is essential. In order to determine the atmospheric response data from the Neumayer III station here we will perform comparisons to other polar stations, resulting in an atmospheric pressure coefficient of 7.5‰/hPa, while the rigidity dependence will be determined experimentally by utilizing several latitude scans. Thereby, the atmospheric pressure and temperature correction will be discussed in more detail and the results of the latitude scan performed between October 2012 and March 2013 will be presented. Moreover, we will show that this latitude scan can also be described by using the yield function of [4].","tags":["Galactic Cosmic Rays","Solar Modulation"],"title":"Mini neutron monitor measurements at the Neumayer III station and on the German research vessel Polarstern","type":"publication"},{"authors":["J. Gieseler","M. Boezio","M. Casolino","N. De Simone","V.D. Felice","B. Heber","M. Martucci"],"categories":[],"content":"","date":1356998400,"expirydate":-62135596800,"kind":"page","lang":"en","lastmod":1616438237,"objectID":"761c82fc9dbe44573aa2c1b18f3f0f0b","permalink":"https://jgieseler.github.io/publication/gieseler-2013/","publishdate":"2021-03-22T18:37:17.573563Z","relpermalink":"/publication/gieseler-2013/","section":"publication","summary":"The spacecraft Ulysses was launched in October 1990 in the maximum phase of solar cycle 22, reached its final, highly inclined (80.2°) Keplerian orbit around the Sun in February 1992, and was finally switched off in June 2009. The Kiel Electron Telescope (KET) aboard Ulysses measures electrons from 3 MeV to a few GeV and protons and helium in the energy range from 6 MeV/nucleon to above 2 GeV/nucleon. Because the Ulysses measurements reflect not only the spatial but also the temporal variation of the energetic particle intensities, it is essential to know the intensity variations for a stationary observer in the heliosphere. This was accomplished in the past with the Interplanetary Monitoring Platform-J (IMP 8) until it was lost in 2006. Fortunately, the satellite-borne experiment PAMELA (Payload for Antimatter Matter Exploration and Light-nuclei Astrophysics) was launched in June 2006 and can be used as a reliable 1 AU baseline for measurements of the KET aboard Ulysses. Furthermore, we show that measurements of higher nuclei by the Advanced Composition Explorer (ACE), launched 1997 and still operating, can also be used as an extended baseline and to improve the analysis. With these tools at hand, we have the opportunity to determine the spatial gradients of galactic cosmic ray (GCR) protons between several tenth MeV to a few GeV in the inner heliosphere during the extended minimum of solar cycle 23. ","tags":["Gradients","Galactic Cosmic Rays"],"title":"Inner heliosphere spatial gradients of GCR protons in the low GeV range","type":"publication"},{"authors":["P. Kühl","N. Dresing","P. Dunzlaff","H. Fichtner","J. Gieseler","R. Gómez-Herrero","B. Heber","A. Klassen","J. Kleimann","A. Kopp","M. Potgieter","K. Scherer","R. D. Strauss"],"categories":[],"content":"","date":1356998400,"expirydate":-62135596800,"kind":"page","lang":"en","lastmod":1616438237,"objectID":"5e5e88e8aa6ea1a630e76c277f2abff5","permalink":"https://jgieseler.github.io/publication/kuehl-2013/","publishdate":"2021-03-22T18:37:17.721699Z","relpermalink":"/publication/kuehl-2013/","section":"publication","summary":"The transport environment for particles in the heliosphere, e.g. galactic cosmic rays (GCRs) and MeV electrons (including those originating from Jupiters magnetosphere), is defined by the solar wind flow and the structure of the embedded heliospheric magnetic field. Solar wind structures, such as co-rotating interaction regions (CIR), can result in periodically modulation of both particles species. A detailed analysis of this recurrent Jovian electron events and galactic cosmic ray decreases measured by SOHO EPHIN is presented here, showing clearly a change of phase between both phenomena during the cause of the years 2007 and 2008. This effect can be explained by the change of difference in heliolongitude between the Earth and Jupiter, which is of central importance for the propagation of Jovian electrons. Furthermore, the data can be ordered such that the 27-day Jovian electron variation vanishes in the sector which does not connect the Earth with Jupiter magnetically using observed solar wind speeds. ","tags":["CIR","Jovian Electrons","Galactic Cosmic Rays","Solar Modulation"],"title":"Simultaneous Analysis of Recurrent Jovian Electron Increases and Galactic Cosmic Ray Decreases","type":"publication"},{"authors":["N. De Simone","V. Di Felice","J. Gieseler","M. Boezio","M. Casolino","P. Picozza","B. Heber","O. Adriani","G.C. Barbarino","G.A. Bazilevskaya","R. Bellotti","E.A. Bogomolov","L. Bonechi","M. Bongi","V. Bonvicini","S. Borisov","S. Bottai","A. Bruno","F. Cafagna","D. Campana","R. Carbone","P. Carlson","G. Castellini","L. Consiglio","M.P. De Pascale","C. De Santis","A.M. Galper","W. Gillard","L. Grishantseva","P. Hofverberg","G. Jerse","A.V. Karelin","S.V. Koldashov","S.Y. Krutkov","A.N. Kvashnin","A. Leonov","V. Malvezzi","L. Marcelli","M. Martucci","A.G. Mayorov","W. Menn","V.V. Mikhailov","E. Mocchiutti","A. Monaco","N. Mori","N. Nikonov","G. Osteria","F. Palma","P. Papini","M. Pearce","C. Pizzolotto","M. Ricci","S.B. Ricciarini","L. Rossetto","M. Simon","R. Sparvoli","P. Spillantini","Y.I. Stozhkov","A. Vacchi","E. Vannuccini","G. Vasilyev","S.A. Voronov","J. Wu","Y.T. Yurkin","G. Zampa","N. Zampa","V.G. Zverev"],"categories":[],"content":"","date":1293840000,"expirydate":-62135596800,"kind":"page","lang":"en","lastmod":1616438238,"objectID":"a7bd776831bec882c5b0e200b43fcc74","permalink":"https://jgieseler.github.io/publication/de-simone-2011/","publishdate":"2021-03-22T18:37:17.870562Z","relpermalink":"/publication/de-simone-2011/","section":"publication","summary":"Ulysses, launched on 6 October 1990, was placed in an elliptical, high inclined (80.2) orbit around the Sun, and was switched off in June 2009. It has been the only spacecraft exploring high-latitude regions of the inner heliosphere. The Kiel Electron Telescope (KET) aboard Ulysses measures electrons from 3 MeV to a few GeV and protons and helium in the energy range from 6 MeV/nucleon to above 2 GeV/nucleon. The PAMELA (Payload for Antimatter Matter Exploration and Light-nuclei Astrophysics) space borne experiment was launched on 15 June 2006 and is continuously collecting data since then. The apparatus measures electrons, positrons, protons, anti-protons and heavier nuclei from about 100 MeV to several hundreds of GeV. Thus the combination of Ulysses and PAMELA measurements is ideally suited to determine the spatial gradients during the extended minimum of solar cycle 23. For protons in the rigidity interval 1.6–1.8 GV we find a radial gradient of 2.7%/AU and a latitudinal gradient of− 0.024%/degree. Although the latitudinal gradient is as expected negative, its value is much smaller than predicted by current particle propagation models. This result is of relevance for the study of propagation parameters in the inner heliosphere.","tags":["Gradients","Galactic Cosmic Rays"],"title":"Latitudinal and radial gradients of galactic cosmic ray protons in the inner heliosphere - PAMELA and Ulysses observations","type":"publication"},{"authors":["J. Gieseler","N. Dresing","P. Dunzlaff","R. Gómez-Herrero","B. Heber","A. Klassen","A. Kopp","R. Müller-Mellin","M. S. Potgieter","S. E. S. Ferreira"],"categories":[],"content":"","date":1248943472,"expirydate":-62135596800,"kind":"page","lang":"en","lastmod":1248943472,"objectID":"9d7af65688eb0f49bdf0af7657b05e78","permalink":"https://jgieseler.github.io/publication/gieseler-2009/","publishdate":"2023-08-30T11:44:32+03:00","relpermalink":"/publication/gieseler-2009/","section":"publication","summary":"It is well known that the galactic cosmic ray (GCR) flux is modulated by corotating interaction regions (CIR) in the vicinity of Earth. When Ulysses first explored high latitude regions in 1996, it was found that the flux of GCRs was still modulated on the time scale of one solar rotation, although neither the solar wind nor the interplanetary magnetic field at these latitudes showed the characteristics of CIRs. This finding led to the modification of our understanding of either the heliospheric magnetic field (HMF, Fisk field) or the transport of particles perpendicular to the HMF. Now, 12 years later, Ulysses explored these high latitude regions again. From September 2007 to September 2008, the GCR flux at Earth showed a clear 27 day solar-rotation modulation. In this contribution, we show that the intensities of GCRs and Jovian electrons at the location of Earth are well modulated with the expected time periods of 27 and 26 days, respectively.","tags":["Galactic Cosmic Rays","Solar Modulation"],"title":"Recurrent modulation of galactic cosmic rays: A comparative study between IMP, SOHO, STEREO, and Ulysses","type":"publication"},{"authors":["B. Heber","A. Kopp","J. Gieseler","R. Müller-Mellin","H. Fichtner","K. Scherer","M.S. Potgieter","S.E.S. Ferreira"],"categories":[],"content":"","date":1230768000,"expirydate":-62135596800,"kind":"page","lang":"en","lastmod":1616438238,"objectID":"0434a0b39ea2587a2518bedec7fd722c","permalink":"https://jgieseler.github.io/publication/heber-2009/","publishdate":"2021-03-22T18:37:18.020317Z","relpermalink":"/publication/heber-2009/","section":"publication","summary":"During the latest Ulysses out-of-ecliptic orbit the solar wind density, pressure, and magnetic field strength have been the lowest ever observed in the history of space exploration. Since cosmic ray particles respond to the heliospheric magnetic field in the expanding solar wind and its turbulence, the weak heliospheric magnetic field as well as the low plasma density and pressure are expected to cause the smallest modulation since the 1970s. In contrast to this expectation, the galactic cosmic ray (GCR) proton flux at 2.5 GV measured by Ulysses in 2008 does not exceed the one observed in the 1990s significantly, while the 2.5 GV GCR electron intensity exceeds the one measured during the 1990s by 30%–40%. At true solar minimum conditions, however, the intensities of both electrons and protons are expected to be the same. In contrast to the 1987 solar minimum, the tilt angle of the solar magnetic field has remained at about 30° in 2008. In order to compare the Ulysses measurements during the 2000 solar magnetic epoch with those obtained 20 years ago, the former have been corrected for the spacecraft trajectory using latitudinal gradients of 0.25% deg−1 and 0.19% deg−1 for protons and electrons, respectively, and a radial gradient of 3% AU−1. In 2008 and 1987, solar activity, as indicated by the sunspot number, was low. Thus, our observations confirm the prediction of modulation models that current sheet and gradient drifts prevent the GCR flux to rise to typical solar minimum values. In addition, measurements of electrons and protons allow us to predict that the 2.5 GV GCR proton intensity will increase by a factor of 1.3 if the tilt angle reaches values below 10°.","tags":["Galactic Cosmic Rays","Solar Modulation"],"title":"Modulation of galactic cosmic ray protons and electrons during an unusual solar minimum","type":"publication"},{"authors":["B. Heber","J. Gieseler","P. Dunzlaef","R. Gómez-Herrero","A. Klassen","R. Müller-Mellin","R.A. Mewaldt","M.S. Potgieter","S.E.S. Ferreira"],"categories":[],"content":"","date":1199145600,"expirydate":-62135596800,"kind":"page","lang":"en","lastmod":1616438238,"objectID":"989b99e7f12ca889acb64a0681af59fc","permalink":"https://jgieseler.github.io/publication/heber-2008/","publishdate":"2021-03-22T18:37:18.189947Z","relpermalink":"/publication/heber-2008/","section":"publication","summary":"Ulysses, launched in 1990 October in the maximum phase of solar cycle 22, completed its third out-of-ecliptic orbit in 2008 February. This provides a unique opportunity to study the propagation of cosmic rays over a wide range of heliographic latitudes during different levels of solar activity and different polarities in the inner heliosphere. Comparison of the first and second fast latitude scans from 1994 to 1995 and from 2000 to 2001 confirmed the expectation of positive latitudinal gradients at solar minimum versus an isotropic Galactic cosmic ray distribution at solar maximum. During the second scan in mid-2000, the solar magnetic field reversed its global polarity. From 2007 to 2008, Ulysses made its third fast latitude scan during the declining phase of solar cycle 23. Therefore, the solar activity is comparable in 2007-2008 to that from 1994 to 1995, but the magnetic polarity is opposite. Thus, one would expect to compare positive with negative latitudinal gradients during these two periods for protons and electrons, respectively. In contrast, our analysis of data from the Kiel Electron Telescope aboard Ulysses results in no significant latitudinal gradients for protons. However, the electrons show, as expected, a positive latitudinal gradient of ~0.2% per degree. Although our result is surprising, the nearly isotropic distribution of protons in 2007-2008 is consistent with an isotropic distribution of electrons from 1994 to 1995.","tags":["Gradients","Galactic Cosmic Rays"],"title":"Latitudinal gradients of galactic cosmic rays during the 2007 solar minimum","type":"publication"},{"authors":["J. Gieseler","B. Heber","P. Dunzlaff","R. Müller-Mellin","A. Klassen","R. Gómez-Herrero","H. Kunow","R. Wimmer-Schweingruber","R.A. Mewaldt"],"categories":[],"content":"","date":1167609600,"expirydate":-62135596800,"kind":"page","lang":"en","lastmod":1616438238,"objectID":"f6f83476fcdc243129413450a86841fc","permalink":"https://jgieseler.github.io/publication/gieseler-2007/","publishdate":"2021-03-22T18:37:18.344954Z","relpermalink":"/publication/gieseler-2007/","section":"publication","summary":"The radial gradient of galactic cosmic rays in the inner heliosphere is studied, using the 125 to~ 200 MeV/n Helium channel from the Kiel Electron Telescope aboard Ulysses and the 147-198 MeV/n carbon channel from the Cosmic Ray Isotope Spectrometer aboard ACE. The time period from 1997 to 2006 covers the solar minima in the A 0-solar magnetic epoch, the solar magnetic reversal to an A","tags":["Gradients","Galactic Cosmic Rays"],"title":"The radial gradient of galactic cosmic rays: Ulysses KET and ACE CRIS Measurements","type":"publication"},{"authors":null,"categories":null,"content":"","date":-62135596800,"expirydate":-62135596800,"kind":"page","lang":"en","lastmod":-62135596800,"objectID":"f26b5133c34eec1aa0a09390a36c2ade","permalink":"https://jgieseler.github.io/admin/config.yml","publishdate":"0001-01-01T00:00:00Z","relpermalink":"/admin/config.yml","section":"","summary":"","tags":null,"title":"","type":"wowchemycms"}]