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Technical questions, problems encountered accessing our pages, questions about our system, or general comments please contact.

Report problems 24-hours-a-day to: rwc.boulder@noaa.gov
or SEC.Webmaster@noaa.gov during normal working hours

Customer services: educational materials, brochures, technical publications, and assistance with products and services (mailing lists, subscriptions to SEC User Notes, etc.). If you have any comments, suggestions, or special requests not covered below, we would appreciate hearing from you.

Larry.Combs@noaa.gov or Barbara.Poppe@noaa.gov


For specific questions pertaining to products or products you would like to see on our pages please refer to following list:

Induced Currents: SEC monitors and forecasts solar and geomagnetic activity which can lead to induced currents, affecting power systems, long-line communications, and pipelines. (Christopher.Balch@noaa.gov)

Navigation: SEC monitors and forecasts geomagnetic storms which may affect ionospheric conditions, solar flares of sufficient energy to disrupt navigation systems, and solar proton events which can perturb the ionosphere. These phenomena can cause effects on LORAN-C and GPS. (Joseph.Kunches@noaa.gov) or (Mihail.Codrescu@noaa.gov)

Satellites: SEC monitors and forecasts geophysical disturbances and solar activity which may lead to geomagnetic activity and energetic particle events, affecting satellite hardware systems, satellite orbits, satellite communication systems, and biological systems. (Kent.A.Doggett@noaa.gov) or (Howard.Singer@noaa.gov)

Operations: SEC's Space Weather Operations (SWO) is the national and world warning center for disturbances that can affect people and equipment working in the space environment. Jointly operated by NOAA and the U.S. Air Force, SWO operates 24 hours a day, 7 days a week, providing forecasts and warnings of solar and geomagnetic activity to users in government, industry, and the private sector. (Kathleen.McKillen@noaa.gov)

Research: SEC conducts research and development on physics of the Sun and interplanetary space (solar cycles, sunspots, x-ray flares, etc.), geospace (geomagnetic disturbances), improving daily solar-terrestrial services, modeling, ground-based and space-based particle and magnetic field measurements, and terrestrial environment effects (satellite drag, ionospheric density, etc.). (Rhonda.Stewart@noaa.gov)


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