Session 1 Agency and National Efforts in Space Weather: Priorities and Opportunities

Monday, 29 January 2024: 8:30 AM-10:00 AM
Key 11 (Hilton Baltimore Inner Harbor)
Host: 21st Conference on Space Weather
Cochairs:
Elsayed R. Talaat, NOAA, NESDIS, Silver Spring, MD and Omar Nava

As global recognition of space weather societal impacts continues to increase, numerous efforts have come into existence to advance the space weather sciences, improve and sustain observations, implement better space weather services, and integrate space weather risks into emergency management and critical infrastructure plans and sectors. These activities are national, international, and multinational in scope. In this session, we will hear from agency leaders of ongoing space weather activities and as well as planned activities, funding priorities, and opportunities.

Papers:
8:30 AM
1.1
Advancing NWS Services to Ensure a Space Weather-Ready Nation
James J. Morrow, NWS, King George, VA; and K. Graham

9:00 AM
1.3
U.S. Geological Survey Geoelectromagnetic Monitoring, Surveying, Modeling, and Analysis for Scientific Investigation and Hazard Estimation and Mapping
E. Joshua Rigler, USGS, Denver, CO; and A. Kelbert, J. J. Love, K. Lewis, USGS Geomagnetism Operations Team, and P. Bedrosian

9:15 AM
1.4
Building NOAA's Operational Space Weather Observations
Steve Volz, NOAA-Assistant Administrator for Satellite and Information Services (NESDIS), Silver Spring, MD

9:30 AM
1.5
Vigil Space Weather Mission - Space Segment
Giuseppe ENGINEERING Mandorlo, European Space Agency, noordwijk, ZH, Netherlands; and C. bramanti, M. Palomba, T. Decoopman, A. Dyne, A. Povoleri, I. Rathband, M. Dean, and A. Lupi

9:45 AM
1.6
NASA's Interdisciplinary Efforts in Space Weather
Nicola Fox, NASA, Washington, DC

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