# Forecasting the Ambient Solar Wind with Numerical Models: I. On the   Implementation of an Operational Framework

**Authors:** Martin A. Reiss, Peter J. MacNeice, Leila M. Mays, Charles N. Arge,, Christian M\"ostl, Ljubomir Nikolic, and Tanja Amerstorfer

arXiv: 1905.04353 · 2019-05-14

## TL;DR

This paper presents an operational framework for forecasting the ambient solar wind using numerical models, combining magnetic field reconstruction, empirical relationships, and ensemble predictions to improve space weather forecasting accuracy.

## Contribution

It introduces a comprehensive, validated framework integrating magnetic field models, empirical solar wind relations, and ensemble methods for operational solar wind forecasting.

## Key findings

- WSA model most accurately predicts solar wind speed.
- Ensemble forecasting slightly improves prediction accuracy.
- Framework effectively studies coronal magnetic fields and solar wind properties.

## Abstract

The ambient solar wind conditions in interplanetary space and in the near-Earth environment are determined by activity on the Sun. Steady solar wind streams modulate the propagation behaviour of interplanetary coronal mass ejections and are themselves an important driver of recurrent geomagnetic storm activity. The knowledge of the ambient solar wind flows and fields is thus an essential component of successful space weather forecasting. Here, we present an implementation of an operational framework for operating, validating and optimizing models of the ambient solar wind flow on the example of Carrington Rotation 2077. We reconstruct the global topology of the coronal magnetic field using the potential field source surface model (PFSS) and the Schatten current sheet model (SCS), and discuss three empirical relationships for specifying the solar wind conditions near the Sun, namely the Wang-Sheeley (WS) model, the distance from the coronal hole boundary (DCHB) model, and the Wang-Sheeley-Arge (WSA) model. By adding uncertainty in the latitude about the sub-Earth point, we select an ensemble of initial conditions and map the solutions to Earth by the Heliospheric Upwind eXtrapolation (HUX) model. We assess the forecasting performance from a continuous variable validation, and find that the WSA model most accurately predicts the solar wind speed time series. We note that the process of ensemble forecasting slightly improves the forecasting performance of all solar wind models investigated. We conclude that the implemented framework is well suited for studying the relationship between coronal magnetic fields and the properties of the ambient solar wind flow in the near-Earth environment.

## Full text

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## Figures

7 figures with captions in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/1905.04353/full.md

## References

55 references — full list in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/1905.04353/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/1905.04353