A quantitative assessment of the occurrence probability of intense geomagnetic storms (peak Dst 280 nT) storms. The mathematical tool to determine this type of PDF is the extreme value modeling, which exhibits more accurate statistics for extreme behavior. Our results estimate S60 ̃ 589, indicating that the March 1989 storm (the event with the largest jDstj in the database) corresponds to an event expected to occur only once every 60 a. The other parameter lt gives the average occurrence rate of storm events. We have tested the null hypothesis that the storm occurrence pattern can be modeled as a Poisson process represented by lt, where different lt exist for the active and quiet periods of the solar cycle. Ordinary x2 tests of goodness of fit can not reject this hypothesis, except within the periods that include extremely frequent occurrences. The rate lt is approximately 2.3 (0.7) per 3 months in the active (quiet) period. A future practical application of this work is that the resultant Poisson probability will enable us to calculate the expected damage due to storms, which represent potential risks in space activities. copyright Published in 2007 by the American Geophysical Union.
CITATION STYLE
Tsubouchi, K., & Omura, Y. (2007). Long-term occurrence probabilities of intense geomagnetic storm events. Space Weather, 5(12). https://doi.org/10.1029/2007SW000329
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