Short term Variability of the Sun Earth System: An Overview of Progress Made during the CAWSES II Period
Nat Gopalswamy, Bruce Tsurutani, and Yihua Yan

TL;DR
This paper reviews recent progress in understanding short-term solar variability and its effects on Earth's space environment during the weak solar cycle 24, highlighting solar eruptions, high speed streams, and space weather impacts.
Contribution
It provides an overview of observational results and insights gained during CAWSES II on how solar activity influences near-Earth space, especially during a weak solar maximum.
Findings
Weak solar activity altered heliosphere conditions.
CME shocks accelerate energetic particles causing geomagnetic storms.
Recurrent geomagnetic storms linked to high speed streams and CIRs.
Abstract
This paper presents an overview of results obtained during the CAWSES II period on the short term variability of the Sun and how it affects the near Earth space environment. CAWSES II was planned to examine the behavior of the solar terrestrial system as the solar activity climbed to its maximum phase in solar cycle 24. After a deep minimum following cycle 23, the Sun climbed to a very weak maximum in terms of the sunspot number in cycle 24 (MiniMax24), so many of the results presented here refer to this weak activity in comparison with cycle 23. The short term variability that has immediate consequence to Earth and geospace manifests as solar eruptions from closed field regions and high speed streams from coronal holes. Both electromagnetic (flares) and mass emissions (coronal mass ejections, CMEs) are involved in solar eruptions, while coronal holes result in high speed streams that…
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Taxonomy
TopicsSolar and Space Plasma Dynamics · Ionosphere and magnetosphere dynamics · Astro and Planetary Science
