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Session
  • Presentation | SH14B: Understanding Space Weather for Human and Robotic Exploration to the Moon, Mars, and Beyond II Oral
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  • SH14B-01: QuickPUNCH Data for Space Weather Operations (highlighted)
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Author(s):
Derek Lamb, Southwest Research Institute Boulder (First Author, Presenting Author)
Daniel Seaton, Southwest Research Institute
Craig DeForest, Southwest Research Institute Boulder
Gabriel Dima, Cooperative Institute for Research in Environmental Sciences
Michael Burek, Cooperative Institute for Research in Environmental Sciences
James Hughes, Southwest Research Institute
Jeff Johnson, NOAA Boulder
Chris Lowder, Southwest Research Institute Boulder
George Millward, CU/CIRES NOAA/SWPC
Ritesh Patel, Southwest Research Institute
Timothy Meisenhelder, Science and Technology Corporation
Jillian Redfern, Southwest Research Institute
Donald Schmit, CU/CIRES-NOAA/NCEI
Nai-Yu Wang, NOAA NESDIS
Matthew West, European Space Research and Technology Centre


The PUNCH mission aims to enhance space weather forecasting by quickly delivering data on the solar corona and heliosphere. The QuickPUNCH project, starting three months post-launch in June 2025, focuses on developing and demonstrating these capabilities for the NOAA Space Weather Prediction Center. The project provides vital information on solar events like coronal mass ejections (CMEs) and solar wind flows. Currently, non-polarized data from QuickPUNCH help supplement existing NOAA data. Future goals include using polarized measurements for 3D CME tracking and improving numerical forecasting models with PUNCH data.



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