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.
S. D. von Fellenberg et al. reported the first mid-infrared detection of a flare from Sgr A*. The JWST/MIRI/Medium Resolution Spectrometer observations were consistent with an orbiting hotspot undergoing electron injection with a spectrum that subsequently breaks from synchrotron cooling. However, mid-infrared extinction measurements appropriate for these data were not yet determined, and, therefore, the temporal evolution of the absolute spectral index remained unknown.
Scaling laws in astrophysical systems that involve energy, geometry, and spatiotemporal evolution provide the theoretical framework for physical models of energy dissipation processes.
Magnetic switchbacks are fluctuations in the solar wind in which the interplanetary magnetic field sharply deflects away from its background direction so as to create folds in magnetic field lines while remaining of roughly constant magnitude. The magnetic field and velocity fluctuations are extremely well correlated in a way corresponding to Alfvénic fluctuations propagating away from the Sun. For a background field which is nearly radial this causes an outwardly propagating jet to form.
Global ideal magnetohydrodynamic models of the heliosphere typically predict a greatly exaggerated magnetic field pile-up in the inner heliosheath (IHS), the region between the termination shock and heliopause. However, Voyager 1 and 2 observations show only a gradual increase throughout this region.
Hot and tenuous plasmas have velocity distribution functions (VDFs) significantly different from Maxwellian distributions. Characterizing how these differences impact wave damping and emission necessitates sophisticated methods for determining the associated dielectric plasma response.
Volatile loss from exoplanetary atmospheres and its possible implications for the longevity of habitable surface conditions is a topic of vigorous debate currently. The vast majority of the habitable zone terrestrial-like exoplanets known to date orbit low-mass M- and K-dwarf stars and are subject to the conditions drastically different to those of terrestrial planets in the Solar System.
In this paper, Singular Spectral Analysis (SSA) is applied to the geomagnetic field to delineate signatures from different sources, such as geomagnetic variability and lithospheric processes. We performed SSA on the Y component of the Swarm satellite magnetic field By during the period from September 2023 to January 2024. Eigen values obtained through SSA were correlated with geomagnetic indices Ap and Dst. λ1 decreases during disturbed geomagnetic conditions (Ap > 20, Dst < −20 nT).
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.
When quantifying changes over time in the natural environment, the stability of the observations used should be considered. Stability conceptually refers to how accurately true geophysical changes and trends are reflected in observational data. We argue the need for a better approach to defining and quantifying stability consistently across climate data records. We propose that the appropriate stability metric is the stability uncertainty for specified spatial and temporal scales.