Abstract

The Sun is responsible for the eruption of billions of tons of plasma and the generation of near light-speed particles that propagate throughout the solar system and beyond. If directed towards Earth, these events can be damaging to our tecnological infrastructure. Hence there is an eort to understand the cause of the eruptive events and how they propagate from Sun to Earth. However, the physics governing their propagation is not well understood, so there is a need to develop a theoretical description of their propagation, known as a Propagation Model, in order to predict when they may impact Earth. It is often dicult to define a single propagation model that correctly describes the physics of solar eruptive events, and even more dicult to implement models capable of catering for all these complexities and to validate them using real observational data. In this paper, we envisage that workflows oer both a theoretical and practical framework for a novel approach to propagation models. We define a mathematical framework that aims at encompassing the dierent modalities with which workflows can be used, and provide a set of generic building blocks written in the TAVERNA workflow language that users can use to build their own propagation models. Finally we test both the theoretical model and the composite building blocks of the workflow with a real Science Use Case that was discussed during the 4th CDAW (Coordinated Data Analysis Workshop) event held by the HELIO project. We show that generic workflow building blocks can be used to construct a propagation model that succesfully describes the transit of solar eruptive events toward Earth and predict a correct Earth-impact time

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