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Funded Projects › FP7

MAARBLE · Monitoring, Analyzing and Assessing Radiation Belt Loss and Energization

FP7Status: CLOSED1 January 201231 December 2014EU funding €1,995,043

The MAARBLE (Monitoring, Analyzing and Assessing Radiation Belt Loss and Energization) project has two focussed and synergistic aims: to advance scientific research on radiation belt dynamics; and to enhance data exploitation of European space missions through combined use of European and US spacecraft measurements and ground-based observations.MAARBLE employs multi-spacecraft monitoring of the geospace environment, complemented by ground-based monitoring, in order to analyze and assess the physical mechanisms leading to radiation belt particle energization and loss. Particular attention is paid to the role of ULF/VLF waves. A database containing properties of the waves will be created and made available to the scientific community. Based on the wave database, a statistical model of the wave activity dependent on the level of geomagnetic activity, solar wind forcing, and magnetospheric region will be developed.Multi-spacecraft particle measurements will be Incorporated into data assimilation tools, leading to new understanding of the causal relationships between ULF/VLF waves and radiation belt dynamics. Data assimilation techniques have been proven as a valuable tool in the field of radiation belts, able to guide 'the best' estimate of the state of a complex system.It should also be stressed that radiation belt dynamics has direct impacts on spacecraft and on humans in space. Most satellites operate in regions where they can be exposed to intense fluxes of extremely energetic radiation belt particles. In addition, the orbit of the International Space Station is such that the exposure of astronauts to relativistic radiation belt electrons is a serious concern. Consequently, understanding the radiation belt environment has important practical applications in the areas of spacecraft operations, spacecraft-system design, mission planning and astronaut safety. Therefore MAARBLE will bear results beneficial to both robotic space exploration and manned spaceflight.

Consortium · 7 organisations

coordinator

ETHNIKO ASTEROSKOPEIO ATHINON

EL · €598,242

participant

USTAV FYZIKY ATMOSFERY AV CR, v.v.i.

CZ · €252,164

participant

THE GOVERNORS OF THE UNIVERSITY OF ALBERTA

CA · €256,879

participant

OFFICE NATIONAL D'ETUDES ET DE RECHERCHES AEROSPATIALES

FR · €268,990

participant

INSTITUTET FOR RYMDFYSIK

SE · €372,160

participant

THE REGENTS OF THE UNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA

US · €20,250

participant

NATURAL ENVIRONMENT RESEARCH COUNCIL

UK · €226,358

Research fields

View the official record on CORDIS →

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Source: CORDIS, Publications Office of the European Union. Global Research Partnerships surfaces open EU research data to help you find collaborators; we are not affiliated with the European Union.