Estimating Satellite Orbital Drag During Historical Magnetic Superstorms
Denny M. Oliveira, Eftyhia Zesta, Hisashi Hayakawa, and Ankush Bhaskar

TL;DR
This study empirically estimates how extreme magnetic superstorms impact satellite orbital drag, revealing that storm duration significantly influences orbital decay, with implications for satellite safety during severe space weather events.
Contribution
It provides the first empirical estimates of thermospheric density enhancements during historical superstorms, highlighting the importance of storm duration alongside intensity.
Findings
Orbital degradation increases with storm severity.
Storm duration is a key factor in orbital drag effects.
Long-lasting superstorms can cause significant satellite orbital decay.
Abstract
Understanding extreme space weather events is of paramount importance in efforts to protect technological systems in space and on the ground. Particularly in the thermosphere, the subsequent extreme magnetic storms can pose serious threats to low-Earth orbit (LEO) spacecraft by intensifying errors in orbit predictions. Extreme magnetic storms (minimum Dst --250 nT) are extremely rare: only 7 events occurred during the era of spacecraft with high-level accelerometers such as CHAMP (CHAllenge Mini-satellite Payload) and GRACE (Gravity Recovery And Climate experiment), and none with minimum Dst --500 nT, here termed magnetic superstorms. Therefore, current knowledge of thermospheric mass density response to superstorms is very limited. Thus, in order to advance this knowledge, four known magnetic superstorms in history, i.e., events occurring before CHAMP's and GRACE's…
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