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Space Weather

Solar flares, coronal mass ejections, solar particle events, and the solar wind form the recipe for space weather that affects life on Earth and astronauts in space.

A portion of the Sun, appears in red, yellow, orange, and black. A yellow burst of solar material juts off of the Sun, against the black expanse of space.

The Sun and Your Everyday Life

Though it is almost 100 million miles away from Earth, the Sun influences our daily lives in ways you may not realize.

A farmer stops their planting operations due to poor GPS signal for their autonomous tractor. A power grid manager changes the configuration of their network to ensure a blackout doesn’t occur due to voltage instability. A pilot switches to back-up communication equipment due to loss of high-frequency radio. A commercial internet company providing service to the military must change the orbit of their spacecraft to avoid a collision due to increased atmospheric drag.

These are a few examples of the ways the Sun influences our everyday lives. This is what we define as space weather – the conditions of the space environment driven by the Sun and it’s impacts on objects in the solar system.

NASA, through the Space Weather Program, studies the physical processes of space weather and it’s impacts in order to develop the understanding that enables successful prediction and applications.

The Space Weather Program also supports NASA’s robotic and human exploration at Earth, the Moon, Mars, and beyond.

On the left, farmer Dwane Roth of Kansas kneels in his field. On the right, an aircraft can be seen treating the field.
Space weather can cause disturbances to the communications and GPS systems that farmers rely on for precision planting and other crucial tasks.
NASA's Goddard Space Flight Center

Science Enabling Space Weather Forecasting and Decision Making

A successful forecast or an improved decision is first built on scientific understanding, and this is where NASA supports user-driven space weather research and applications.

NASA implements the Space Weather Research-to-Operations-to-Research (R2O2R) Program Element on behalf of and in collaboration with NOAA, DoD, and NSF to accelerate targeted space weather research toward operational implementation.

R2O2R refers to the cyclical process by which basic and applied research activities (R), having been identified as having the potential for improving forecasting capabilities, are matured in a targeted way toward a formal operational implementation (O) and, once ”operationalized,” subsequent needs for refinements are conveyed back to the research community (R).

NASA's Space Weather Instrument Pipeline is another pathway to host space weather instruments on commercial and other space-based platforms. To date, NASA has selected three instruments for the Pipeline and released two RFIs to gather community input to inform the future of the initiative.

Photo of a woman pointing at a large colorful screen display showing space weather visualiztions.
Photo of the Space Weather Lab at NASA's Goddard Space Flight Center

International Space Station, Artemis, and Mars

Protecting Astronauts and Assets in Space

Beyond Earth's protection, astronauts are exposed to the harsh environment of space.

Heliophysics Division missions and applied research support activities to keep astronauts and spacecraft situationally aware across the solar system to the potential threats of space weather.

NASA’s Moon to Mars Space Weather Prediction Office (M2M) conducts real-time space weather assessments to support the development and validation of new capabilities for understanding space weather impacts on NASA robotic and human exploration activities.

M2M collaborates with NOAA SWPC to support NASA Space Radiation Analysis Group (SRAG) during NASA human exploration missions like Artemis I in 2022.

Artemis II crew members, shown inside the Neil Armstrong Operations and Checkout Building at NASA’s Kennedy Space Center in Florida, stand in front of their Orion crew module on Aug. 8, 2023. From left are: Jeremy Hansen, mission specialist; Victor Glover, pilot; Reid Wiseman, commander; and Christina Hammock Koch, mission specialist. The crew module is undergoing acoustic testing ahead of integration with the European Service Module. Artemis II is the first crewed mission on NASA’s path to establishing a long-term lunar presence for science and exploration under Artemis.
NASA/Kim Shiflett

Space Weather Interagency Collaborations

Promoting Research and Observations of Space Weather to Improve Forecasting of Tomorrow

Improving the ability of the United States to forecast space weather events and mitigate the effects of space weather

Signed into law on October 21, 2020, by President Trump, the Promoting Research and Observations of Space Weather to Improve Forecasting of Tomorrow (PROSWIFT) Act directs a variety of government agencies, including NOAA, NASA, NSF, DOD, and the Department of the Interior, to coordinate in order to improve space weather forecasts and predictions and mitigate its impact.

More on the PROSWIFT Act
Signing of the Memorandum of Agreement for Space Weather Research-to-Operations-to-Research Collaboration, Eisenhower Executive Office Building, Washington, D.C., Dec. 7, 2023. Left to right: NASA Nicola Fox, Ph.D., NOAA Ken Graham, NOAA Stephen Volz, Ph.D., NSF Timothy Patten, Ph.D. (on behalf of Alexandra Isern, Ph.D.), DAF Major General Mark Slocum (on behalf of Lieutenant General James C. Slife), and DAF Dr. Joel Mozer (on behalf of Lisa Costa, Ph.D.). (Image credit:
Bob Hyatt, NOAA

The nation’s strategy for space weather preparedness

The National Space Weather Strategy and Action Plan (NSW-SAP) identifies objectives and high-level actions necessary to achieve a space-weather-ready Nation and was released in March 2019. An Implementation Plan for the NSW-SAP was released in December 2023.

Strong coordination and collaboration across Federal agencies, the academic community, the private sector, and international allies and partners will improve America’s ability to understand, forecast, and prepare for space weather events.

See the NSW-SAP Implementation Plan
A split screen view of the Sun, shown in a dark orange and black. On the left, the May 8 flare is a bright white burrst of sputtering solar material. On the right, the May 7 flare is a bright white burst of solar material seen near the black expanse of space.
NASA’s Solar Dynamics Observatory captured these images of the solar flares — as seen in the bright flashes in the left image (May 8 flare) and the right image (May 7 flare). The image shows a subset of extreme ultraviolet light that highlights the extremely hot material in flares and which is colorized in red.
NASA/SDO

NASA's Heliophysics Division established the NASA Space Weather Council (SWC) in 2020

The SWC was established to secure the counsel of community experts across diverse areas of matters relevant to space weather in support the NASA Heliophysics Division. The SWC is a subcommittee to the NASA Advisory Council’s Heliophysics Advisory Committee (HPAC).

The SWC serves as a community-based, interdisciplinary forum for soliciting and coordinating community analysis and input to provide advice on space weather topics to the Heliophysics Division Director through HPAC.

More about the NASA Space Weather Council
Earth is surrounded by a system of magnetic fields, called the magnetosphere. The magnetosphere shields our home planet from harmful solar and cosmic particle radiation, but it can change shape in response to incoming space weather from the Sun.
Earth is surrounded by a system of magnetic fields, called the magnetosphere. The magnetosphere shields our home planet from harmful solar and cosmic particle radiation, but it can change shape in response to incoming space weather from the Sun.
NASA's Scientific Visualization Studio

Federal coordination of space weather activities

The Space Weather Operations, Research, and Mitigation (SWORM) Subcommittee is a Federal coordinating body organized under the National Science and Technology Council (NSTC) Committee on Homeland and National Security, organized under the Office of Science and Technology Policy (OSTP). The SWORM coordinates Federal Government department and agency activities to meet the goals and objectives specified in the National Space Weather Strategy and Action Plan (NSW-SAP) released in March 2019.

The Space Weather Advisory Group (SWAG) advises the SWORM based on advice from academia, the commercial space weather sector, and space weather end users.

More about SWORM
This image from June 20, 2013, at 11:15 p.m. EDT shows the bright light of a solar flare on the left side of the sun and an eruption of solar material shooting through the sun’s atmosphere, called a prominence eruption. Shortly thereafter, this same region of the sun sent a coronal mass ejection out into space.
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