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Space weather scientists at NOAA and experts across the government celebrated a new collaborative effort to improve space weather forecasts and services to mitigate impacts of space weather. Serving Essential Space Weather Communities
- Dashboards
Current Space Weather Conditions. on NOAA Scales. R1 (Minor)...
- About Space Weather
Space Weather impacts numerous facets of everyday life, from...
- Products and Data
SWPC provides numerous tools, graphics and datasets to help...
- Media and Resources
Media and Resources - Homepage | NOAA / NWS Space Weather...
- Annual Meeting
About Space Weather Workshop. Space Weather Workshop is an...
- Feedback
Feedback - Homepage | NOAA / NWS Space Weather Prediction...
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Based on the post-shock velocity, space weather forecasters...
- Impacts
About Space Weather Impacts. Different types of space...
- Dashboards
Get a 30 to 90 minute forecast of the location and intensity of the aurora based on the OVATION model. Learn how the aurora is related to space weather and how to observe it from different locations.
Find out the current and historical space weather conditions on NOAA scales and their impacts on various systems. Learn how to interpret the levels of severity of solar activity and what to expect from space weather bulletins.
Find current and forecasted space weather conditions on NOAA scales for various phenomena and impacts. Explore products, data, models, reports, alerts, and more from the official source of space weather information.
A daily deterministic and probabilistic forecast, for next three days, of geomagnetic activity. Observed values of Ap and deterministic Ap forecasts are provided, followed by probabilistic forecasts for four categories of geomagnetic activity, and deterministic 3-hourly Kp forecasts for three days.
The Space Weather Prediction Center (SWPC), named the Space Environment Center (SEC) until 2007, is a laboratory and service center of the US National Weather Service (NWS), part of the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA), located in Boulder, Colorado.
Learn about the variations in the space environment between the sun and Earth that impact systems and technologies. Find out how aurora, coronal holes, CMEs, geomagnetic storms, ionosphere, radiation belts, solar flares, and more affect space weather.