For questions about the data, use the contact info in the relevant readme files, or email ncei.info@noaa.gov
The SWFO instruments will be hosted on two different satellites - SOLAR-1 and GOES-19 - which will provide real-time measurements of solar wind plasma, supra-thermal ions and magnetic fields at the Lagrange Point 1 (L1) in the Sun-Earth line, and remote observations of the solar corona at L1 and geostationary orbit (GEO).
Note: Before launch, the GOES-19 satellite was called GOES-U. The SOLAR-1 will be the name of SWFO-L1 after it arrives at L1. SWFO Programmatic Documents
- GOES-U launched on June 25th, 2024.
- SWFO-L1 launched on September 24th, 2025.
NCEI archives and disseminates SWFO operational and science-quality data products, preserves and improves content, and ensures that data and metadata are accessible and easy to use. This page provides access to data and documentation from SWFO instruments.
All publicly released data products are available from the SPOT portal.
Approximate orbit distances from Earth’s surface are:
- L1: 1,500,000 km
- GEO: 36,000 km
| SWFO Instrument | Brief description of the observation | Host Satellite (Orbit) |
|---|---|---|
| CCOR-1 Compact Coronagraph |
Coronal White Light Images
|
GOES-19 (GEO) |
| CCOR-2 Compact Coronagraph |
Coronal White Light Images
|
SOLAR-1 (L1) |
| MAG Magnetometer |
Vector Magnetic Field Two triaxial fluxgate magnetometers mounted on a boom (~ 5m and ~ 6.6m from the spacecraft)
|
SOLAR-1 (L1) |
| STIS SupraThermal Ion Sensor |
Suprathermal Ion and Electron Fluxes Two solid state telescopes, one primarily measuring ion fluxes and the other primarily measuring electron fluxes.
|
SOLAR-1 (L1) |
| SWiPS Solar Wind Plasma Sensor |
Solar Wind Thermal Plasma IonVelocity, Density and Temperature Two identical top-hat Electrostatic Analyzers (ESA)
|
SOLAR-1 (L1) |
The Compact Coronagraph CCOR-1 is NOAA’s first operational, space based coronagraph to support space weather forecasting provided by NOAA Space Weather Prediction Center (SWPC). It is onboard NOAA's Geostationary Operational Environmental Satellite 19 (GOES-19), launched on June 25, 2024.
CCOR-1 images the solar corona (from 3.7 to 17 solar radii, with spatial resolution of about 50 arcseconds) in the visible wavelength range (480 nm to 730 nm) with a latency of 15 min from the geostationary orbit.
CCOR-1 1st imagery was released in Oct 2024 and CCOR-1 data products achieved provisional maturity on Feb 24, 2025. One can see the latest CCOR-1 animations at the SWPC page and access the science-quality and operational CCOR-1 data products from the SPOT CCOR-1 page.
Please refer to the CCOR-1 documents for more information on data products, usage, caveats and metadata definitions.
Science-Quality CCOR-1 Data
Scientific data levels are described in Table 4 of the Product Readme.
| Product | Filename and Data Access Link |
|---|---|
| CCOR-1 coronagraph images - Level 1A | sci_ccor1-l1a_g19 |
| CCOR-1 coronagraph images - Level 2 | sci_ccor1-l2_g19 |
| CCOR-1 coronagraph images - Level 3 | sci_ccor1-l3_g19 |
| CCOR-1 coronagraph images - Monthly Minimum | sci_ccor1-mm_g19 |
| CCOR-1 coronagraph images - Daily Median | sci_ccor1-dm_g19 |
Operational CCOR-1 Data
Operational data levels are described in Table 2 of the Product Readme.
| Product | Filename and Data Access Link |
|---|---|
| CCOR-1 coronagraph images - Level 0B | CCOR1_0B |
| CCOR-1 coronagraph images - Level 1A | CCOR1_1A |
| CCOR-1 coronagraph images - Level 1B | CCOR1_1B |
| CCOR-1 coronagraph images - Level 2 | CCOR1_2 |
| CCOR-1 coronagraph images - Level 3 | CCOR1_3 |
Ancillary Data
The Compact Coronagraph CCOR-2 will be onboard NOAA’s SOLAR-1 satellite, planned for launch in the Fall of 2025.
The Magnetometer MAG will be onboard NOAA’s SOLAR-1 satellite, planned for launch in the Fall of 2025.
The Suprathermal Ion Sensor STIS will be onboard NOAA’s SOLAR-1 satellite, planned for launch in the Fall of 2025.
The Solar Wind Plasma Sensor will be onboard NOAA’s SOLAR-1 satellite, planned for launch in the Fall of 2025.
