A Space Weather Information Service Based Upon Remote and In-Situ Measurements of Coronal Mass Ejections Heading for Earth
Birgit Ritter, Arjan J. H. Meskers, Oscar Miles, Michael Ru{\ss}wurm,, Stephen Scully, Andr\'es Rold\'an, Oliver Hartkorn, Peter J\"ustel, Victor, R\'eville, Sorina Lupu, and Alexis Ruffenach

TL;DR
This paper proposes a six-spacecraft mission at 0.72 AU to monitor coronal mass ejections using remote and in-situ measurements, aiming to improve space weather forecasting and scientific understanding.
Contribution
It introduces a novel multi-spacecraft mission concept combining remote and in-situ measurements for enhanced space weather prediction and scientific data collection.
Findings
Increased space weather forecasting time.
Continuous real-time monitoring of CMEs.
Enhanced scientific data for modeling solar phenomena.
Abstract
The Earth's magnetosphere is formed as a consequence of interaction between the planet's magnetic field and the solar wind, a continuous plasma stream from the Sun. A number of different solar wind phenomena have been studied over the past forty years with the intention of understanding and forecasting solar behavior. One of these phenomena in particular, Earth-bound interplanetary coronal mass ejections (CMEs), can significantly disturb the Earth's magnetosphere for a short time and cause geomagnetic storms. This publication presents a mission concept consisting of six spacecraft that are equally spaced in a heliocentric orbit at 0.72 AU. These spacecraft will monitor the plasma properties, the magnetic field's orientation and magnitude, and the 3D-propagation trajectory of CMEs heading for Earth. The primary objective of this mission is to increase space weather (SW) forecasting time…
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