Oct 27 – 31, 2025
Europe/Stockholm timezone

The Longitudinal Extent of Solar Particle Events Observed at Mars with MSL RAD

Not scheduled
15m
Poster P2 - Space Weather at the Moon, Mars, and Beyond: Recent Advancements, Observations, and Future Opportunities for Exploration P2 - Space Weather at the Moon, Mars, and Beyond: Recent Advancements, Observations, and Future Opportunities for Exploration

Speaker

Don Hassler (Southwest Research Institute)

Description

The Radiation Assessment Detector (RAD) on the Mars Rover Curiosity has been effectively serving as a space weather monitor on the surface of Mars since Curiosity landed on the red planet in 2012. RAD has measured the impact of more than a dozen solar storms, with the frequency of events increasing as the Sun approaches solar maximum. Two relatively large events (Sept. 10, 2017 and Oct. 28, 2021) were observed as Ground Level Events (GLEs) at both Earth and Mars, separated by ~180 degrees in longitude. Most recently, RAD observed its largest event to date as part of the May 2024 solar storms that impacted both Earth and Mars. We will discuss these events and their implications for space weather predictions, as well as the need for heliosphere-wide space weather monitoring to support future human exploration to Mars and beyond.

Primary authors

Don Hassler (Southwest Research Institute) Bent Ehresmann (Southwest Research Institute, Boulder, CO) Robert Wimmer-Schweingruber (University of Kiel) Cary Zeitlin (Leidos Corporation, Houston, TX, USA)

Presentation materials

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