Sun blast hurls gas cloud at Earth

If your cell phone isn’t work right in the next couple of days this could be why…

DENVER, Colorado (AP) – Another spectacular eruption on the surface of the sun sent charged particles hurling toward Earth on Wednesday, and scientists said the cloud could significantly disrupt communications on Earth and may even hamper firefighting efforts in California.

“It’s headed straight for us like a freight train,” said John Kohl, a solar astrophysicist at the Harvard-Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics in Cambridge, Massachusetts. “This is the real thing.”

In Tokyo, Japan’s space agency announced the Kodama communications satellite malfunctioned after being affected by the flare. The agency said it was temporarily shut down and would be reactivated after the solar storm subsided.

The explosion of gas and charged particles into space from the corona, the outermost layer of the sun’s atmosphere, isn’t harmful to people. But it can knock out satellite communications, which some emergency crews are relying on in battling California’s wildfires.

Similar solar events in recent years have disrupted television transmissions, GPS navigation, oil pipeline controls and even the flow of electricity along power lines.

Space weather forecasters first warned of that possibility last week, when a previous solar flare erupted, and then they saw a new sunspot region developing in another region of the sun’s face.

The cloud of charged particles from last week’s eruption struck Earth “with only a glancing blow,” Kohl said. It disrupted some airline communications.

But scientists observed one of the three biggest such explosions in 30 years shortly before 6 a.m. EST Tuesday. It produced a particle cloud 13 times larger than Earth and hurtled through the solar system at more than 1 million miles per hour.

The resulting geomagnetic storm could be ranked among the most powerful of its kind and last for 24 hours. It is expected to disrupt the communications satellites and high frequency radios.

In southern California, wildfires already have knocked out many microwave communication antennas on the ground, making satellite communications important to emergency efforts. Researchers said safety personnel might encounter communications interference.

Federal researchers said they already have turned off instruments and taken other precautions with science satellites.

A positive note: strong geomagnetic storms can produce colorful auroras in the night sky visible as far south as Texas and Florida beginning late Wednesday.

Sunspots and solar storms tend to occur in 11-year cycles; the current cycle peaked in late 2000. Scientists compared the latest flare to the “Bastille Day storm” that occurred in July 2000.

“The Bastille Day storm produced considerable disruption to both ground and space high-tech systems,” said Bill Murtagh, a space weather forecaster for the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration.

http://www.cnn.com/2003/TECH/space/10/29/solar.flares.ap/index.html

Re: Sun blast hurls gas cloud at Earth

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*Originally posted by underthedome: *

A positive note: strong geomagnetic storms can produce colorful auroras in the night sky visible as far south as Texas and Florida beginning late Wednesday.

[/QUOTE]

anyone see these?

Re: Re: Sun blast hurls gas cloud at Earth

[QUOTE]
*Originally posted by Fraudz: *

anyone see these?
[/QUOTE]

Peer Ji , it says late wed.....I am in texas, but i cannot see in the future :D

That explains my abnormally crummy radio reception on my drive back from work...

"One of the largest

According to scientists the flare is the third largest detected since regular solar monitoring began 25 years ago."

[thumb=D]solar_flare.JPG[/thumb] #

[thumb=D]solar_flare_2.JPG[/thumb]

I was reading about this sort of phenomena a couple of weeks ago oblivious of the fact that we were heading into a renewed bout of solar activity. Apparently a Roman garrison was mistakingly ordered to march to the coastal town of Ostia because Tiberius Caesar in 34 AD thought that the red glow seen on the northern horizon at night was Ostia in flames.

Darn it, but these days it’s the millions at stake in the satellite industry.

On Thursday night at about 7:00PM, I saw the Northern sky here in West Virginia lit up in red and greenish yellow colors. It was amazing. But at first, I thought a small town was on fire across one of the mountains:blush:

In West Virginia it was probably one of those toothless trash people, drunk and blowing up their junk car that you see parked in their backyard.

:mocking: just kidding.

The Sun has unleashed its largest recorded solar flare, capping 10 days of unprecedented activity for the star.

Last week there were X7 and X10 events that took place back-to-back.

Powerful solar flares are given an "X" designation. There was an X8 and an X3 event on Sunday. And on Monday, there was an X3 flare followed by smaller ones.

Tuesday's flare went off the scale; researchers say it was "well above X20". A precise description is difficult because some monitoring satellites were briefly blinded the scale of the event.

[thumb=D]big_flare.JPG[/thumb]

Link for above

TofiBaba - I guess I should have looked a little more closely, but all the hunting dogs and Hillbilly music was getting to be too much for me! Silly Tofi - :rotfl:

any news on how much this affected RF transmission and communications?