Abstract

AbstractThe Geomagnetism Group at the National Centers for Environmental Information (NCEI), in collaboration with the Cooperative Institute for Research in Environmental Sciences (CIRES), along with various government and industry partners, specializes in developing and providing access to Earth's internal magnetic field models. These models are crucial for applications such as compass navigation and wellbore positioning, offering reference values for the geomagnetic field (total field, dip or inclination, and declination) at any location across the Earth. This study assesses the Weimer geomagnetic perturbation model, proposed by Weimer in 2013, which is an empirical model of magnetic field variations at high latitudes driven by solar wind measurements, as a candidate for capturing geomagnetic field variations in high‐latitude areas. We compare the geomagnetic field variations predicted by the Weimer model against data from the INTERMAGNET and SuperMAG observatory networks. Our findings indicate that the Weimer model achieves a reduction in the standard deviations of high‐latitude magnetic field variations by approximately 20%–30% once quiet‐time baselines are removed from the data set. Furthermore, we compare the performance of the Weimer model against the Space Weather Modeling Framework's Geospace model during specific geomagnetic storms in 2017 and 2018, and we find that the Weimer model is more effective in predicting magnetic variations at high latitudes than the Geospace model during these storms. Additionally, comparisons to magnetometer data collected from high‐latitude directional‐drilling operations align with the trends observed in comparisons with INTERMAGNET and SuperMAG observatory data, confirming the Weimer model's reliability and effectiveness for such applications.

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