Listed are all scientific papers resulting from an ISSI activity written or co-authored by ISSI Team members, Working Group members, Workshop participants, visitors or staff members.
In satellite remote sensing of land surface Essential Climate Variables (ECVs) using optical sensors, an atmospheric correction step is typically required to convert top-of-atmosphere (TOA) bi-directional reflectances into top-of-canopy (TOC) bi-directional reflectances. We analyse the error covariance structure of TOC reflectances that arises specifically from uncertainties in atmospheric correction.
Context. Optical flow methods aim to infer horizontal (transverse, in the general case) velocities in the solar atmosphere from the temporal changes in maps of physical quantities, such as intensity or magnetic field. So far, these methods have mostly been tested and applied to the continuum intensity and line-of-sight (LOS) magnetic field in the low to mid-photosphere. Aims.
Shocks driven by coronal mass ejections (CMEs) are the most powerful accelerators of gradual solar energetic particles (SEPs) in the inner heliosphere. On 2023 March 13, a halo CME, as seen from the Solar and Heliospheric Observatory (SOHO) and the Sun TErrestrial Relations Observatory (STEREO), gave rise to a strong SEP event.
Trends of essential climate variables are often estimated from climate data records to quantify changes in the Earth system. An understanding of the uncertainty in a trend is essential for accurately determining the significance of a trend and attributing its causes. Despite this importance, trend-uncertainty estimates rarely account for all known sources of uncertainty.
Context. A major challenge in modeling classical Cepheids is the treatment of convection, particularly its complex interplay with pulsation. This inherently three-dimensional (3D) process is typically approximated in one-dimensional (1D) hydrocodes, using dimensionless turbulent convection (TC) free parameters.
Water and land surfaces on a planet interact in particular ways with gases in the atmosphere and with radiation from the star. These interactions define the environments that prevail on the planet, some of which may be more amenable to prebiotic chemistry, some to the evolution of more complex life.
The subauroral region, located equatorward of the auroral oval, is a highly dynamic and complex interface between the magnetosphere, ionosphere, and thermosphere. While traditionally associated with stable optical structures such as stable auroral red arcs, recent observations have revealed a wide range of transient and extreme phenomena—such as subauroral ion drifts and strong thermal emission velocity enhancement—which highlight the region’s variability and intense coupling.
Coagulation of dust particles in protoplanetary disks is the first step on the journey to the formation of planets. The surface free energy (SFE) of the dust particles determines the effectiveness of particles sticking to each other after collision, as well as the critical collision velocity above which fragmentation will occur. Studies of SFE have focused on the simplest silicate, silica, usually at standard temperature and pressure.
This article reviews the emerging field of exo-geoscience, focusing on the geological and geophysical processes thought to influence the evolution and (eu)habitability of rocky exoplanets. We examine the possible roles of planetary interiors, tectonic regimes, continental coverage, volatile cycling, magnetic fields, and atmospheric composition and evolution in shaping long-term climate stability and biospheric potential.
Solar activity exhibits a range of quasi-periodic variations among different indices, reflecting the complex dynamics of the Sun. In this study, we investigate the temporal variation and hemispheric asymmetry of sunspot counts (SSC), sunspot areas (SSA), and X-ray solar flares during Solar Cycles 23 (SC23), SC24, and the ascending and maximum phase of SC 25 (1996–2024).