Jon Vandegriff

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Interoperability between datasets in Heliophysics and Planetary archives is increasingly important to address complex science questions about space weather and planetary plasma environments. Yet for cross-disciplinary studies, data ingestion is often a tedious, time-consuming process. We have developed the Heliophysics Application Programmer’s Interface (HAPI), a standard specification that captures a lowest common denominator method for accessing time series data. HAPI offers the ability to request data from multiple sources using a single interface, coupled with the ability to get identically formatted data from each source. HAPI has been recognized as a standard by the Committee on Space Research (COSPAR) and has gained adoption at multiple institutions in the US, including Goddard Space Flight Center’s Coordinated Data Analysis Web (GSFC/CDAWeb), the Planetary Data System Planetary Plasma Interactions Node (PDS/PPI), and the Laboratory for Atmospheric and Space Physics (LASP) Interactive Solar Irradiance Data Center (LISIRD). European plasma data centers such as the French Plasma Physics Data Centre (CDPP) and European Space Astronomy Centre (ESAC) are also in the process of adopting HAPI. We present an overview of the HAPI specification and describe how data centers can add HAPI access to their content. We also present how scientists can plot or download HAPI data using Python or using existing analysis tools such as Autoplot (Faden, 2010) and Space Physics Environment Data Analysis Software (SPEDAS) (Angelopoulos, 2019). Faden, J.B., Weigel, R.S., Merka, J. et al. Autoplot: a browser for scientific data on the web. Earth Sci Inform 3, 41–49 (2010). https://doi.org/10.1007/s12145-010-0049-0 Angelopoulos V, Cruce P, Drozdov A, et al. The Space Physics Environment Data Analysis System (SPEDAS). Space Sci Rev. 2019;215(1):9. doi:10.1007/s11214-018-0576-4