dc.description.abstract |
Owing to the ever-present solar wind, our vast
solar system is full of plasmas. The turbulent solar wind,
together with sporadic solar eruptions, introduces various space
plasma processes and phenomena in the solar atmosphere all
the way to Earth’s ionosphere and atmosphere and outward
to interact with the interstellar media to form the heliopause
and termination shock. Remarkable progress has been made
in space plasma physics in the last 65 years, mainly due to
sophisticated in situ measurements of plasmas, plasma waves,
neutral particles, energetic particles, and dust via space-borne
satellite instrumentation. Additionally, high-technology groundbased
instrumentation has led to new and greater knowledge
of solar and auroral features. As a result, a new branch of
space physics, i.e., space weather, has emerged since many of
the space physics processes have a direct or indirect influence
on humankind. After briefly reviewing the major space physics
discoveries before rockets and satellites (Section I), we aim to
review all our updated understanding on coronal holes, solar
flares, and coronal mass ejections, which are central to space
weather events at Earth (Section II), solar wind (Section III),
storms and substorms (Section IV), magnetotail and substorms,
emphasizing the role of the magnetotail in substorm dynamics
(Section V), radiation belts/energetic magnetospheric particles
(Section VI), structures and space weather dynamics in the
ionosphere (Section VII), plasma waves, instabilities, and waveparticle
interactions (Section VIII), long-period geomagnetic
pulsations (Section IX), auroras (Section X), geomagnetically
induced currents (GICs, Section XI), planetary magnetospheres
and solar/stellar wind interactions with comets, moons and
asteroids (Section XII), interplanetary discontinuities, shocks and
waves (Section XIII), interplanetary dust (Section XIV), space
dusty plasmas (Section XV), and solar energetic particles and
shocks, including the heliospheric termination shock (Section
XVI). This article is aimed to provide a panoramic view of space
physics and space weather. |
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