From time to time, the sun discharges billionsof tons of solar matter, traveling millions of miles per hour, straight at Earth.
Yet humans and life on the surface aren't physically harmed by the intense space radiation. That's why, when the strongest solar impact to occur in over 20 years recently hit, you may have been blithely unaware — except for the resulting atmospheric light show, as magnificent glowing auroras appeared in unusual places.
Not all worlds, like the moon and Mars, have such protection. Yet Earth boasts both a robust magnetic field and atmosphere, which keep dangerous cosmic particles away from our fragile flesh.
SEE ALSO: NASA's Voyager is in hostile territory. It's 'dodging bullets.'"Without those we would be in real trouble," Bennett Maruca, an assistant professor of physics and astronomy at the University of Delaware who researches the sun, told Mashable.
Tweet may have been deleted
Some 1,800 miles beneath your feet lies a giant, blazing-hot ball of metal.
Earth's core is largely made of molten iron and nickel — an ideal fluid to conduct electricity. As it swirls around and around it acts similar to an electric generator, creating electrical currents that naturally produce a big magnetic field. As the graphic below shows, the magnetic field loops out from the poles, trapping harmful solar energy a safe distance away (and in some cases deflecting these energetic solar particles).
Ultimately, many particles slam into Earth's atmosphere, following magnetic lines to the poles where they deposit energy and produce fantastic atmospheric radiance (popularly called the Northern Lights in the Northern Hemisphere).
The instigators of the recent lights were "coronal mass ejections," or CMEs, from the sun. These are great masses of hot gas (plasma), essentially a chunk of the sun, hurled into space. When they collide with Earth, they can create robust "geomagnetic storms," which are disturbances in Earth's magnetic field from these solar shocks.
"Multiple coronal mass ejections from the sun sparked an extreme geomagnetic storm around the Earth last week [May 11], creating stunning auroras, even in places where the northern lights are rarely seen," the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration explained. "The Southern Hemisphere also reported remarkable auroras from the storm."
Our planet's upper atmosphere also shields us from harmful solar activity, not just coronal mass ejections, but also the relentless solar wind and solar flares (explosions of light from the sun's surface).
"It's a planetary kevlar vest," Maruca emphasized.
Well above our clouds and weather, both the ionosphere and thermosphere (together ranging from some 50 to 400 miles up) absorb charged particles and damaging radiation, like X-rays and UV rays.
"We're well-protected by the natural systems here."
"We're well-protected by the natural systems here," Andrew Layden, chair of the Department of Physics and Astronomy at Bowling Green State University, told Mashable.
Of course, astronauts on the International Space Station (and in the coming years on the moon or Mars) aren't protected by these natural buffers; hence the extra shielding on the station. Airline workers, working at higher altitudes, may potentially have some exposure risk, too, though this is an ongoing area of research.
Extreme eruptions from the sun, located 93 million miles away, can't physically hurt us. But our electrical and communication systems are vulnerable. "It's not our biological systems at risk – it's our technology," Maruca said.
During the May 2024 solar storms, many farming tractors, reliant on GPS satellite guidance systems, went offline. In 2003, airlines rerouted flights, at great cost, to avoid communication blackouts. In 1989, an extreme solar storm fried a $10 milliontransformer at Salem Nuclear Power Plant in New Jersey. The same CME knocked out power to millions in Québec, Canada. It hit Earth's magnetic field, and then, wrote NASA astronomer Sten Odenwald, "Just after 2:44 a.m. on March 13, the currents found a weakness in the electrical power grid of Quebec. In less than two minutes, the entire Quebec power grid lost power. During the 12-hour blackout that followed, millions of people suddenly found themselves in dark office buildings and underground pedestrian tunnels, and in stalled elevators."
Even bigger solar storms are inevitable.
The largest such episode ever observed was the Carrington Event, in 1859, The solar storms produced auroras so bright, they awoke Rocky Mountain gold miners at 1 a.m., and people could reportedly read newspapers by the eerie atmospheric light.
Such an event today — if not properly prepared for — could stoke widespread electrical blackouts and fry communications satellites. "If that were to occur today it would do a lot of damage," Layden said. "No one knows when that Carrington-level event is going to happen again." A report from the National Academies says that an estimate of "$1 trillion to $2 trillion during the first year alone was given for the societal and economic costs of a 'severe geomagnetic storm scenario' with recovery times of 4 to 10 years."
"It's a staggering figure," Maruca said.
Thankfully, we have space weather prediction experts, such as those at NOAA, who can provide warning of an incoming blast of charged particles and radiation. Power utilities, for example, can temporarily shut down electric grids to avoid permanently-damaged infrastructure.
It's only a matter of time. "Investing in space weather prediction is a good thing to do," Layden said.
Copyright © 2023 Powered by
Why Earthlings are safe when huge solar storms strike our planet-休牛归马网
sitemap
文章
2
浏览
49453
获赞
3
Mia Farrow's Twitter account is joyfully bizarre
Stream of consciousness writing made for great 20th century fiction, and now it's coming for 21st ceIt's time for a hot pink iPhone that meets the cultural moment
With the rise of Barbiecore and Bimbocore, the resurgence of Y2K fashion and aesthetics, and the preApple WWDC 2023 keynote livestream: How to watch, start time, streaming info
The big day is almost here.Apple's annual Worldwide Developers Conference (or WWDC) kicks off with aHow to sign up to Threads
Threads, Meta's answer to Twitter, is here. Launched on July 6, the new standalone app is dedicatedFacebook criticized by Free Press for empty PR response to ad boycott
In the face of mounting advertiser pressure over its handling of hate speech, Mark Zuckerberg todayThe best fitness tech of 2022
In 2022, fitness tech made bold strides.According to Strava's 2022 Year in Sport data report, the shTikTok is bringing back the '00s digital camera
This Halloween, in the midst of Wordle-inspired costumes and general mayhem, something stood out toAndy Baraghani's favorite YouTube videos include Oscar speeches, Jinkx Monsoon, and Janet
Andy Baraghani is many things, but he wouldn't call himself a content creator. The amiable Iranian cComedian gives her family brilliant informational pamphlets before going on a date
Anticipating her family's inevitable questions, Mary Beth Barone prepared an informational pamphletOpenAI CEO says GPT
All things AI seem to be moving at light speed over the past year. New AI companies and AI-powered mElon Musk will launch Ron DeSantis' presidential campaign on Twitter Spaces
"For Twitter to deserve public trust, it must be politically neutral," Twitter owner Elon Musk tweetThe best memes of 2022
It's been a long, bizarre year with an incredible amount of meme-worthy moments. From Kim KardashianHarry and Meghan share a new pic of baby Archie for Mother's Day
Baby feet: a great way to celebrate Mother's Day.The Duke and Duchess of Sussex posted a new photo oWhy are 'doubloons' going viral on TikTok?
TikTok's latest trendobsession is a tricky one to unpack. It's both obscure and absurd, beginning wiTwitter now blocks visitors from viewing tweets, profiles unless they're logged in
UPDATE: Jun. 30, 2023, 6:15 p.m. EDT Elon Musk now claims this is a "temporary emergency measure."Re