Solar Storm Events
Real-time monitoring from 250 scientific data sources
About Space Weather Monitoring
Space weather events — geomagnetic storms, solar energetic particle events, and radio blackouts — can disrupt satellite operations, power grids, aviation, and communications infrastructure. Calamity monitors all three categories using NOAA's G/S/R classification scales.
Our space weather pipeline integrates data from NOAA's Space Weather Prediction Center (SWPC), the DSCOVR satellite at the L1 Lagrange point, the GFZ German Research Centre for Geosciences (Kp index), NASA's DONKI notification system, and GOES X-ray flux monitors.
The cascade model evaluates three potential secondary effects: geomagnetically induced currents (GIC) affecting power infrastructure (G3+), enhanced radiation exposure for aviation (S3+), and HF communication disruption (R3+). These cascades use step-function spatial decay since space weather impacts are global rather than localized.
Primary Data Sources
SWPC, DSCOVR, GFZ Kp, DONKI, GOES X-ray, ESA SWE, SIDC, PECASUS
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