Springer Verlag, Earth, Moon, and Planets, 1-4(104), p. 277-285
DOI: 10.1007/s11038-008-9267-6
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The original publication is available at springerlink.com ; Restricted Access ; Radio spectrometers of the CALLISTO type to observe solar flares have been distributed to nine locations around the globe. The instruments observe automatically, their data is collected every day via internet and stored in a central data base. A public web-interface exists through which data can be browsed and retrieved. The nine instruments form a network called e-CALLISTO. It is still growing in the number of stations, as redundancy is desirable for full 24 h coverage of the solar radio emission in the meter and low decimeter band. The e- CALLISTO system has already proven to be a valuable new tool for monitoring solar activity and for space weather research.