Heliophysics : space storms and radiation : causes and effects için kapak resmi
Heliophysics : space storms and radiation : causes and effects
Başlık:
Heliophysics : space storms and radiation : causes and effects
ISBN:
9780521760515
Yayım Bilgisi:
Cambridge : Cambridge University Press, 2010.
Fiziksel Açıklamalar:
xi, 447, [12] s. : şkl. ; 26 cm
Genel Not:
Perspective on heliophysics / George L. Siscoe and Carolus J. Schrijver

Kaynakça var.

"Heliophysics is a fast-developing scientific discipline that integrates studies of the Sun's variability, the surrounding heliosphere, and the environment and climate of planets. The Sun is a magnetically variable star and, for planets with intrinsic magnetic fields, planets with atmospheres, or planets like Earth with both, there are profound consequences. This volume, the second in a series of three heliophysics texts, integrates the many aspects of space storms and the energetic radiation associated with them - from causes on the Sun to effects in planetary environments. It reviews the physical processes in solar flares and coronal mass ejections, interplanetary shocks, and particle acceleration and transport, and considers many space weather responses in geospace. In addition to its utility as a textbook, it also constitutes a foundational reference for researchers in fields from heliophysics to climate science. Additional online resources, including lecture presentations and other teaching materials, are available at www.cambridge.org/9780521760515"--Provided by publisher. "Over the past few centuries, our awareness of the couplings between the Sun's variability and the Earth's environment, and perhaps even its climate, has been advancing at an ever increasing rate. The Sun is a magnetically variable star and for planets with intrinsic magnetic fields, planets with atmospheres, or planets like Earth with both, there are profound consequences and impacts. Today, the successful increase in knowledge of the workings of the Sun's magnetic activity, the recognition of the many physical processes that couple the realm of the Sun to our galaxy, and the insights into the interaction of the solar wind and radiation with the Earth's magnetic field, atmosphere and climate system have tended to differentiate and insularize the solar heliospheric and geo-space sub-disciplines of the physics of the local cosmos"--Provided by publisher. Perspective on heliophysics / George L. Siscoe and Carolus J. Schrijver -- Introduction to space storms and radiation / Sten Odenwald -- In-situ detection of energetic particles / George Gloeckler -- Radiative signatures of energetic particles / Tim Bastian -- Observations of solar and stellar eruptions, flares, and jets / Hugh Hudson -- Models of coronal mass ejections and flares / Terry Forbes -- Shocks in heliophysics / Merav Opher -- Particle acceleration in shocks / Dietmar Krauss-Varban -- Energetic particle transport / Joe Giacalone -- Energy conversion in planetary magnetospheres / Vytenis Vasyli¯unas -- Energization of trapped particles / Janet Green -- Flares, coronal mass ejections, and atmospheric responses / Tim Fuller-Rowell and Stanley C. Solomon -- Energetic particles and manned spaceflight / Stephen Guetersloh and Neal Zapp -- Energetic particles and technology / Alan Tribble.
Özet:
"Heliophysics is a fast-developing scientific discipline that integrates studies of the Sun's variability, the surrounding heliosphere, and the environment and climate of planets. The Sun is a magnetically variable star and, for planets with intrinsic magnetic fields, planets with atmospheres, or planets like Earth with both, there are profound consequences. This volume, the second in a series of three heliophysics texts, integrates the many aspects of space storms and the energetic radiation associated with them - from causes on the Sun to effects in planetary environments. It reviews the physical processes in solar flares and coronal mass ejections, interplanetary shocks, and particle acceleration and transport, and considers many space weather responses in geospace. In addition to its utility as a textbook, it also constitutes a foundational reference for researchers in fields from heliophysics to climate science. Additional online resources, including lecture presentations and other teaching materials, are available at www.cambridge.org/9780521760515"--Provided by publisher. "Over the past few centuries, our awareness of the couplings between the Sun's variability and the Earth's environment, and perhaps even its climate, has been advancing at an ever increasing rate. The Sun is a magnetically variable star and for planets with intrinsic magnetic fields, planets with atmospheres, or planets like Earth with both, there are profound consequences and impacts. Today, the successful increase in knowledge of the workings of the Sun's magnetic activity, the recognition of the many physical processes that couple the realm of the Sun to our galaxy, and the insights into the interaction of the solar wind and radiation with the Earth's magnetic field, atmosphere and climate system have tended to differentiate and insularize the solar heliospheric and geo-space sub-disciplines of the physics of the local cosmos"--Provided by publisher. Perspective on heliophysics / George L. Siscoe and Carolus J. Schrijver -- Introduction to space storms and radiation / Sten Odenwald -- In-situ detection of energetic particles / George Gloeckler -- Radiative signatures of energetic particles / Tim Bastian -- Observations of solar and stellar eruptions, flares, and jets / Hugh Hudson -- Models of coronal mass ejections and flares / Terry Forbes -- Shocks in heliophysics / Merav Opher -- Particle acceleration in shocks / Dietmar Krauss-Varban -- Energetic particle transport / Joe Giacalone -- Energy conversion in planetary magnetospheres / Vytenis Vasyli¯unas -- Energization of trapped particles / Janet Green -- Flares, coronal mass ejections, and atmospheric responses / Tim Fuller-Rowell and Stanley C. Solomon -- Energetic particles and manned spaceflight / Stephen Guetersloh and Neal Zapp -- Energetic particles and technology / Alan Tribble.