Tadesse, T.; Wiegelmann, T.; Inhester, B.; Pevtsov, A.: Magnetic Connectivity Between Active Regions 10987, 10988, and 10989 by Means of Nonlinear Force-Free Field Extrapolation. Solar Physics 277, pp. 119 - 130 (2012)
Tadesse, T.; Wiegelmann, T.; Inhester, B.; Pevtsov, A.: Coronal Magnetic Field Structure and Evolution for Flaring AR 11117 and Its Surroundings. Solar Physics 281, pp. 53 - 65 (2012)
Wiegelmann, T.; Thalmann, J. K.; Inhester, B.; Tadesse, T.; Sun, X.; Hoeksema, J. T.: How Should One Optimize Nonlinear Force-Free Coronal Magnetic Field Extrapolations from SDO/HMI Vector Magnetograms? Solar Physics 281, pp. 37 - 51 (2012)
DeRosa, M. L.; Schrijver, C. J.; Barnes, G.; Leka, K. D.; Lites, B. W.; Aschwanden, M. J.; Amari, T.; Canou, A.; McTiernan, J. M.; Régnier, S.et al.; Thalmann, J. K.; Valori, G.; Wheatland, M. S.; Wiegelmann, T.; Cheung, M. C. M.; Conlon, P. A.; Fuhrmann, M.; Inhester, B.; Tadesse, T.: A Critical Assessment of Nonlinear Force-Free Field Modeling of the Solar Corona for Active Region 10953. Astrophysical Journal 696, pp. 1780 - 1791 (2009)
Tadesse, T.; Wiegelmann, T.; Inhester, B.: Nonlinear force-free coronal magnetic field modelling and preprocessing of vector magnetograms in spherical geometry. Astronomy and Astrophysics 508, pp. 421 - 432 (2009)
Tadesse Asfaw, T.: Nonlinear force-free reconstruction of the coronal magnetic field with advanced numerical methods. Dissertation, Georg-August-Universität Göttingen (2011)
The Uranian magnetic field is more expansive than previously thought, according to newly analyzed data from Voyager 2, making it easier to search for moons with oceans.
The Planetary Plasma Environments group (PPE) has a strong heritage in the exploration of planetary magnetospheres and space plasma interactions throughout the solar system. It has contributed instruments to several past missions that flew-by or orbited Jupiter (Galileo, Cassini, Ulysses). The PPE participates in the JUICE mission by contributing hardware and scientific expertise to the Particle Environment Package (PEP).
The MPS instruments on board ESA’s JUICE spacecraft have successfully completed their commissioning in space - and delivered their first observational data.
A collision nearly 30 years ago permanently changed Jupiter's atmospheric chemistry; the aftermath is still helping to better understand the gas giant.
The launch was successful; the ESA’s space probe JUICE is now on its way to the Jupiter system. There, it will primarily study the gas giant's icy moons.
ESA's space probe is on the move: First it heads for the launch site in Kourou - and in April it will begin its long journey to Jupiter and its icy moons.