Wednesday, January 25, 2012

U.S. Must Take Space Storm Threat Seriously, Experts Warn


Note: I realized after putting this at my blog that this is actually talking about a Space Storm one year ago on Valentine's Day. When I originally published this I thought this article was about this weeks storm. So this is talking about an Xclass 2.2 storm. The one that happened this week starting Sunday was a Class 3 storm which was  much more powerful and was a proton storm. However, I don't know what an X class storm means for the 2.2 last year.




http://www.space.com/10906-space-storms-threat.html

 U.S. Must Take Space Storm Threat Seriously, Experts Warn

 

An X2.2 flare erupted from the sun's active region 1158 (at lower right) at about 0150 UT or 8:50 pm ET on Feb. 14, 2011.
An X2.2 flare erupted from the sun's active region 1158 (at lower right) at about 0150 UT or 8:50 pm ET on Feb. 14, 2011.
CREDIT: NASA/SDO/GFSC
WASHINGTON — Space weather could pose serious problems here on Earth in the coming years, the chief of the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) said Saturday (Feb. 19).
A severe solar storm has the potential to take down telecommunications and power grids, and the country needs to work on being better prepared, said NOAA administrator Jane Lubchenco here at the annual meeting of the American Association for the Advancement of Science. Lubchenco is also the U.S. Under Secretary of Commerce for Oceans and Atmosphere.
"This is not a matter of if, it's simply a matter of when and how big," Lubchenco said of the potential for a dangerous solar flare. "We have every reason to expect we're going to be seeing more space weather in the coming years, and it behooves us to be smart and be prepared."

Ramping up

The space weather threat is becoming more dire as our sun ramps up toward its period of solar maximum, predicted for around 2013. Activity on the sun fluctuates on a roughly 11-year cycle, and our star has been relatively dormant for a while.


That's clearly starting to change, though, as evidenced by a class X solar flare – the strongest kind – that erupted from the sun Feb. 14.
"I think the events of this week certainly underscore how important it is for us to be paying attention to space weather and to be prepared to respond to, and mitigate, potential impacts," Lubchenco said. "As we enter into a period of enhanced solar activity it seems pretty clear that we are going to be looking at the possibility of not only more solar events but also the possibility of some very strong events."
The Feb. 14 flare unleashed a wave of charged particles that streamed immediately toward Earth, as well as coronal mass ejections, or blobs of plasma, that took days to arrive here. When they did, they interacted with Earth's magnetic field to cause geomagnetic storms that wiped out radio communications in the Western Pacific Ocean and parts of Asia, and caused airlines to reroute some polar flights to avoid radio outages.

Next time could be worse

However, experts say we got off fairly lucky with this recent solar storm, and that future eruptions could cause worse damage, particularly to the sensitive transformers and capacitors in power grids. If some of these were harmed, there could be power outages for days, weeks, months, or even, in the case of severe damage, years, experts warned.
"It turned out that we were quite well protected this time, so not much happened," said European Space Agency scientist Juha-Pekka Luntama. "In another case things might have been different."
Space weather hasn't posed quite such a threat before, because during the last solar maximum, around 10 years ago, the world wasn't as dependent on satellite telecommunications, cell phones and global positioning system (GPS) – all technologies that could be disrupted by solar flares.
"Many things we take for granted today are so much more prone to the effects of space weather than was the case during the last maximum," Lubchenco said. The problem is likely to get even worse as the world could likely become more technologically dependent by the time the next solar maximum rolls around, and the next.

Slightly scary

Other experts agree that the risk must be addressed.
"It is slightly scary, and I think properly so," said John Beddington, the U.K. government's chief scientific adviser. "We've got to be scared by these events otherwise we will not take them seriously."
He and other European officials said the world needs greater international cooperation to meet the threat of dangerous space weather.
"There are few emergency scenarios today that require such close cooperation across the Atlantic as a geomagnetic storm," said Helena Lindberg, director general for the Swedish Civil Contingencies Agency (MSB).
We have an "urgent need to start sharing expertise and connecting our systems for warning and for response," Lindberg said. "This cooperation has to be put in place before a disaster hits."
Despite the risk, though, some experts stressed that there's reason to be optimistic. There is work being done to improve our ability to forecast solar storms in advance, equip more satellites with radiation shielding and fortify power grids with resilient transformers and capacitors.
"Please don’t panic," said Stephan Lechner of the Institute for the Protection and Security of the Citizen at the European Commission's Joint Research Centre. "Please don't leave the room and tell everybody that space weather will kill us tomorrow." end quote.

next quote repeated from above: ""This is not a matter of if, it's simply a matter of when and how big," Lubchenco said of the potential for a dangerous solar flare. "We have every reason to expect we're going to be seeing more space weather in the coming years, and it behooves us to be smart and be prepared." end 2nd quote.

This made me think of a movie that I enjoyed with Nicolas Cage called

Knowing (2009) - Synopsis

This isn't the right site if you want to watch the movie because that would be Netflix or Amazon Prime or some other streaming company that also might rent a DVD or sell you a DVD if that is what you wanted. But this last article reminded me a lot of this movie. However, I agree that being able to forecast space storms(especially because of all the low voltage sensitive computers, smart phones and satellites on earth now) might be really important. For example, I don't know if during a CME (Coronal Mass Ejection) shielding your computer or other electronic device with a lead shield like your dentist uses during an X-Ray might help or not during a level 5 CME (a level 5 CME is sort of like a Level 5 hurricane in it's effects on electronics and electrical equipment worldwide. It is my belief also that humans are also affected by CME's to a greater to lesser degree depending upon how close to the electrical disturbances when they hit earth and it's magnetosphere they are. As an intuitive I can feel stressed or feel like a radio receiving static instead of clear stations like I normally do. This storm we just experienced was a Level 3 storm in intensity.

I used to listen to I believe it was a radio station in Los Angeles on the radio during my high school classes because I had gold, platinum, and silver in my teeth and if my saliva was right I could place my jaw in a certain position and listen to the radio when I was in English or History class. But mostly I found this sort of annoying more than anything else. I have talked to Science teachers about this and when you have 2 or more metals in your fillings in your teeth sometimes your mouth becomes a de facto radio crystal set and you hear the radio station that your crystal set (mouth) is tuned to when your jaw is in the right position. However, this is very unusual and never worked since I moved away from Glendale where it happened one year around 1963 to 1964 I believe. This last story was to illustrate how everyone is affected by radio waves, Television waves, cell phone signals etc. going through the air. We are also affected by radiation from the sun and CME's. For example, what if we had like in the movie a level 10 or 20 CME or above. That could cook our brains or DNA and be the end of us. What is the likelihood of that? Actually, that is sort of an unknown. So, even if the odds were 1 in a million or more I suppose it is possible but not likely.

Note: I realized after putting this at my blog that this is actually talking about a Space Storm one year ago on Valentine's Day. When I originally published this I thought this article was about this weeks storm.

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