US Ground-based magnetometer arrays

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US Ground Magnetometer Board

This wiki page and related ground magnetometer board meetings are part of a community driven effort to (1) review operations/status/performance of all US-funded ground magnetometer arrays, (2) discuss priorities for future ground magnetometer locations in consultation with the wider community including USGS/ULTIMA/NSF, (3) transition towards a Class-II facility/DASI operations model as recommended by the 2015-2016 NSF Geospace Portfolio Review, (4) facilitate the production and dissemination of high level data products that support scientific investigations, spacecraft missions, modeling efforts, and space weather forecasts. For more information about the current state and future of ground magnetometer networks in support of space weather monitoring and research, see this article in Space Weather.

Current Ground Magnetometer Board Members:

  • Peter Chi
  • Mark Engebretson, (former chair)
  • Jennifer Gannon
  • Jesper Gjerloev
  • Michael Hartinger, (current chair, mhartinger@spacescience.org)
  • Hyomin Kim
  • Gang Lu
  • Josh Rigler
  • Michelle Salzano
  • Howard Singer
  • Endawoke Yizengaw

Former Ground Magnetometer Board Members:

  • Carol Finn
  • Efthyia Zesta

US-Sponsored Ground-Based Magnetometer Arrays and Programs*

Array Location Instruments Manufacturer No. of Locations
AAL-PIP Antarctica Fluxgate Lviv Centre ISR 6
AAL-PIP Antarctica Induction Coil UNH 4
AMBER Africa Fluxgate UCLA 7
AMBER South America Fluxgate UCLA 2
AMBER East Asia Fluxgate UCLA 4
Falcon Continental US Fluxgate UCLA 11
GIMA Alaska Fluxgate Narod 9
Jicamarca South America Fluxgate UCLA 2
LISN South America Fluxgate Custom/Jicamarca 6
MACCS Arctic Canada Fluxgate Narod 8
McMAC Continental US & Mexico Fluxgate UCLA 9
MEASURE Continental US Fluxgate UCLA 6
SAMBA South America & Antarctica Fluxgate UCLA 12
THEMIS Continental US & Canada Fluxgate UCLA 24
US Geological Survey US & Territories Fluxgate Narod, Technical Univ of Denmark 11
NJIT / AGO Antarctica Fluxgate Bell Labs 7
NJIT / AGO Antarctica Induction Coil Tohoku University 5
MICA Antarctica Induction Coil UNH 5
MICA Arctic Canada Induction Coil UNH 4
MICA Svalbard Induction Coil UNH 4
  • Some locations listed here have instruments that are not currently operating.

Ground Magnetometer Data

SuperMAG

USGS Geomagnetism Program

INTERMAGNET

Spherical Elementary Currents from James Weygand

THEMIS

NASA CDAWeb

UNH Magnetic Induction Coil Array (MICA)

IUGONET

Digital Object Identifiers for Ground Magnetometer Data

Digital Object Identifiers (DOI) allow authors to cite data products just as they refer to papers. This is becoming a requirement of many journals, as it assures that the specific data used in a publication are findable and accessible. The DOI provides a permanent identifier (PID) for the data, remaining unchanged even if the data are moved to another archive. The "creators" (authors) of the data must link the DOI to a "landing page" that provides details about the data and methods for accessing them. Our group recommends that each ground magnetometer network generate DOIs for their datasets, at minimum one DOI for their original measurements (i.e., before filtering and other types of processing are performed).

As a member of the DataCite organization, NASA Heliophysics (HP) can "mint" DOIs for ground magnetometer datasets. NASA HP is providing an easy means to assign DOIs to datasets using the HP Digital Resource Registry (HDRR) by providing landing pages for datasets based on their "SPASE" resource descriptions. As an example, any users of NASA's OMNI dataset can now use https://doi.org/10.48322/1shr-ht18 for the hourly dataset, and other DOIs for other sets, discoverable by a search with the Heliophysics Data Portal (HDP; https://heliophysicsdata.gsfc.nasa.gov; look for "omni" in the "observatory" entry at the left). More details for DOI initiation for resources in the HDP can be found here. For further information, and especially to start the process of registering DOIs, contact James Weygand (jweygand@igpp.ucla.edu or jweygand@epss.ucla.edu).

As noted above, a SPASE resource description is required for each magnetometer dataset to mint a DOI. Here's an example for the MACCS magnetometer network 5s measurements.

2019 GEM workshop meeting

The ground magnetometer advisory board was formed in 2016 as a community driven effort to (1) review operations/status/performance of all US-funded ground magnetometer arrays, (2) discuss priorities for future ground magnetometer locations in consultation with the wider community including USGS/ULTIMA/NSF, (3) transition towards a Class-II facility/DASI operations model as recommended by the 2015-2016 NSF Geospace Portfolio Review, (4) facilitate the production and dissemination of high level data products that support scientific investigations, spacecraft missions, modeling efforts, and space weather forecasts.

We invite the GEM community to attend our meeting on Monday, June 24 at 1:30 PM, where we’ll discuss updates on all the above items. Later this year, we’ll add new members to the advisory board who either operate ground magnetometers or use magnetometer data to support their scientific investigations and/or space weather monitoring efforts. If you’re interested in learning more about this opportunity, please attend this GEM meeting or contact Mike Hartinger (mdhartin@vt.edu).

Monday, 24 June, 1:30 PM, Location: Santa Fe

  • Mike Hartinger - Updates on ground magnetometer advisory board activities
  • Mark Engebretson - Summary of information gathering report
  • Lisa Winter - NSF updates
  • Hyomin Kim - DRUM/DASI updates and future plans, discussion
  • Jesper Gjerloev - SuperMAG updates
  • Josh Rigler - USGS updates, updates from other magnetometer arrays

2019 mini-GEM workshop meeting

Sunday, 8 December, 1200-1330, Location: Oregon Room


August 2020 Virtual Discussion: Ground Magnetometer Measurements for Heliophysics Research and Space Weather Monitoring

Friday, 7 August, 1500-1630 EDT

Meeting Summary and Community Feedback from Google Form

Discussion from this meeting and previous meetings was summarized in this Heliophysics 2050 white paper.

Invited Speakers

Project Updates

February 2021 Virtual Discussion: Applications of Ground Magnetometer Measurements to Geophysics Research

Thursday, 4 February, 1100-1230 US Eastern Time

This virtual meeting will begin with an invited talk from Gary Egbert on current/future applications of ground magnetometers to geophysics research, including magnetotellurics research relevant to Heliophysics/GIC. This continues a series of discussions intended to gather feedback for the upcoming Heliophysics Decadal Survey.

The rest of the meeting will be for updates from SuperMAG and individual magnetometer networks, NSF announcements, and discussion of magnetometer digital object identifiers.

Meeting notes and summary

Link to Gary Egbert's 2020 AGU presentation, "Modeling Diurnal Variation Magnetic Fields for Mantle Induction Studies"

July 2021 Virtual Discussion: Input from Ground Magnetometer Community to the Decadal Survey

Thursday, 8 July, 1200-1330 US Eastern Time

This virtual meeting focused on gathering feedback for the Solar and Space Physics Decadal Survey. The discussion began with several presentations related to open magnetometer science questions and infrastructure. The rest of the meeting was for open discussion on topics for magnetometer-related white papers for the decadal survey.

Meeting notes

October 2021 Virtual Discussion: Input from Ground Magnetometer Community to the Decadal Survey, continued (1)

Thursday, 19 October, 1400-1530 US Eastern Time

This virtual meeting focused on gathering feedback for the Solar and Space Physics Decadal Survey, continuing discussion from July 2021. This was a free flowing discussion to add background material for ground magnetometer white papers to a google doc.

February 2022 Virtual Discussion: Input from Ground Magnetometer Community to the Decadal Survey, continued (2)

Monday, 7 February, 1600-1700 US Eastern Time

This virtual meeting is focused on gathering feedback for the Solar and Space Physics Decadal Survey, continuing discussion from July and October 2021.