The successfully completed ESA project QUID-REGIS brings new insights about the dynamics of the interface between outer space and Earth.

Scientists from the Institute of Experimental Physics SAS, in collaboration with the German Aerospace Center (DLR) and the Institute of Atmospheric Physics of the Czech Academy of Sciences, have successfully completed the two-year QUID-REGIS project (QUiet Ionospheric Disturbances REsearch based on Ground-based mesospheric and Ionospheric data with Swarm data). The project was funded by the European Space Agency (ESA), and its results provide a new perspective on the dynamics of the interface between outer space and Earth’s atmosphere.
“The aim of the project was to improve our understanding of the influence of atmospheric dynamics on the ionosphere, which plays a key role in the functioning of satellite navigation and radio communication. The project combined data from the Swarm satellite mission, as well as extensive databases of ground-based measurements, enabling a detailed analysis of processes that have so far been only little explored,” said Šimon Mackovjak from the Department of Space Physics at the Institute of Experimental Physics SAS, who led the Slovak participation in the project.







