Space Weather research and monitoring are fundamental to our understanding of our long-term space climate. Knowledge of interactions in the Sun-Earth system, the physics behind observed space-weather phenomena, and their direct impact on modern technologies are key areas of interest, for example, for scientists, engineers, technicians, satellite and power grid operators, those involved in navigation and communications, the aviation sector, space weather service providers, STEM practitioners, and of course the military. This involves all aspects of political, forecaster, end-user, and scientific engagement with various stakeholders with the full recognition that space weather is a worldwide potential threat with varied local, regional, continent-wide, and global impacts.
The LOFAR For Space Weather (LOFAR4SW) project (Horizon 2020 INFRADEV) was a design study that looked into an upgrade of the Low Frequency Array (LOFAR) radio telescope. The project laid out a novel design to bring new capabilities into the space-weather domain. This design addressed all conceptual and technical aspects required to upgrade the LOFAR system to take on a new parallel role as a space-weather monitoring facility. Several of the desired Space Weather observations are currently undertaken using LOFAR observing time gained via peer-reviewed time applications, but often not simultaneously, and not alongside the normal astronomy observations as LOFAR does not possess this inherent capability required.
When fully implemented, this innovative new facility will enable large-scale monitoring projects that will generate unique LOFAR data for the European (and global) space-weather research community. These data will have great downstream potential for improved precision of and advance warnings for space weather events affecting crucial infrastructure here on earth.
The LOFAR4SW design process drew together a body of hand-picked international scientists that identified and rated the impact of a range of space weather science goals. A trade-off study balanced these goals with the technical requirements to achieve them. The project designed requirements and priorities of the LOFAR4SW upgrade based on these community needs. The resulting LOFAR space weather telescope design incorporates the existing LOFAR system specifications, the design goals formed by the science community and the formal system engineering process. The project delivered a LOFAR4SW implementation plan including building costs for the upgrade process. Upgrading the LOFAR telescope with the LOFAR4SW design will provide a solution for the space weather community's needs.