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Creators/Authors contains: "Pulkkinen, Antti"

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  1. Abstract Natural hazards, such as weather in space and the terrestrial environment, have the potential to disrupt critical technologies and infrastructures that contribute to national security and economic advancement. Enhancing our understanding of natural hazards is a central part to developing mitigation strategies to avert their impact on technological assets and/or infrastructure. With the support of the broader scientific community, the International Space Weather Initiative (ISWI) and the African Geophysical Society (AGS) successfully organized two international events in September–October 2023, namely, the ISWI space weather school and the AGS Annual Conference. Both events were locally hosted by the Physics Society of Zambia in Lusaka, Zambia. This paper is a summary report of the two events, highlighting efforts focused on advancing scientific research in Africa. The report also outlines some of the major challenges faced and discusses key considerations for organizing future meetings. 
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    Free, publicly-accessible full text available February 1, 2026
  2. The space physics community continues to grow and become both more interdisciplinary and more intertwined with commercial and government operations. This has created a need for a framework to easily identify what projects can be used for specific applications and how close the tool is to routine autonomous or on-demand implementation and operation. We propose the Application Usability Level (AUL) framework and publicizing AULs to help the community quantify the progress of successful applications, metrics, and validation efforts. This framework will also aid the scientific community by supplying the type of information needed to build off of previously published work and publicizing the applications and requirements needed by the user communities. In this paper, we define the AUL framework, outline the milestones required for progression to higher AULs, and provide example projects utilizing the AUL framework. This work has been completed as part of the activities of the Assessment of Understanding and Quantifying Progress working group which is part of the International Forum for Space Weather Capabilities Assessment. 
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  3. Abstract An intriguing aspect of the famous September 2, 1859 geomagnetic disturbance (or “Carrington” event) is the horizontal magnetic (BH) data set measured in Colaba, India (magnetic latitude approximately 20°N). The field exhibits a sharp decrease of over 1,600 nT and a quick recovery of about 1,300 nT, all within a few hours during the daytime. The mechanism behind this has previously been attributed to magnetospheric processes, ionospheric processes or a combination of both. In this study, we outline our efforts to replicate this low‐latitude magnetic field using the Space Weather Modeling Framework. By simulating an extremely high pressure solar wind scenario, we can emulate the low‐latitude surface magnetic signal at Colaba. In our simulation, magnetospheric currents adjacent to the near‐Earth magnetopause and strong Region 1 field‐aligned currents are the main contributors to the large ColabaBH. The rapid recovery ofBHin our simulated scenario is due to the retreat of these magnetospheric currents as the magnetosphere expands, as opposed to ring current dynamics. In addition, we find that the scenario that best emulated the surface magnetic field observations during the Carrington event had a minimum calculated Dst value between −431 and −1,191 nT, indicating that Dst may not be a suitable estimate of storm intensity for this kind of event. 
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