June 6, 2000 CME and resulting June 8, 2000 Geomagnetic Storm


Snapshots of web pages using ACE data to monitor the June 6, 2000 CME and resulting geomagnetic storm on June 8 2000.

ACE Real-Time Solar Wind (RTSW) Data from NOAA's Space Environment Center (SEC) provides up to an hour's advance warning of unusual solar activity, such as solar flares and coronal mass ejections, which can cause geomagnetic storms.

Near-Real Time Prediction of Dst (Geo-Magnetic Storm Level) from the Space Physics Research Group at U.C. Berkeley.

Real-time plots of RTSW data, predictions of Dst index and Proton distribution in the inner magnetosphere from the CRL/Hiraiso Solar Terrestrial Research Center Space Environment Information Service, Japan.

Near-Real-time Predictions of AE, Dst and Kp, using ACE data and a neural network(Danish Meteorological Institute/Swedish Institute of Space Physics).

Near-Real Time Prediction of Dst, AL and AU indices from the Nonlinear Dynamics and Space Physics (NDSP) Group at NASA's Goddard Space Flight Center. A Powerpoint Presentation describing the models in more detail.

Linear Modeling of Ionospheric Electrodynamics (LiMIE) at Space Physics Research Laboratory, University of Michigan.

Researchers at the Space Research Institute in Moscow are generating geomagnetic storm and substorm warnings using ACE RTSW data.

SpaceWeather Bureau Science news and information about the Sun-Earth environment.

BBC News Sci/Tech Science news from the BBC.


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Last Updated: 7 April, 2000
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