The biggest space
weather storm in five years is hurtling toward Earth, threatening to disrupt
power grids, GPS systems, satellites and airline flights, experts say.
The brunt of the storm is expected to strike early Thursday and last
through Friday, possibly garbling some of Earthlings' most prized gadgets but
also giving viewers in parts of Central Asia a prime look at the aurora
borealis, or northern lights, when darkness falls on Thursday.
"Space weather has gotten very interesting over the past 24
hours," said Joseph Kunches, a space weather scientist with the National
Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA), on Wednesday.
Meanwhile, NASA warned of a "severe" storm event that would
impact both the Earth and Mars as well as some key space agency satellites.
The fuss began late Sunday at an active region on the Sun known as
1429, with a big solar flare that was associated with a burst of solar wind and
plasma known as a coronal mass ejection that thrust toward the Earth at some
four million miles per hour (6.4 million kilometers per hour).
A pair of solar flares and a CME followed overnight Tuesday-Wednesday,
setting off a strong geomagnetic and solar radiation storm registering at level
three on a five-step scale.
NASA said the first of the two flares on March 6-7 -- classified in the
potent X class and facing directly at the Earth -- was the biggest this year
and one of the largest of this cycle known as the solar minimum, which began in
early 2007.
In fact, it was second only to a stronger one that erupted in August,
and the leading edge of the CME it sparked is expected to reach Earth at 0525
GMT on March 8, plus or minus seven hours.
"Such a CME could result in a severe geomagnetic storm, causing
aurora at low latitudes, with possible disruption to high frequency radio
communication, global positioning systems (GPS) and power grids," NASA
said.
The solar flares alone caused brief high frequency radio blackouts that
have now passed, according to NOAA.
The storm is likely "the strongest one since December 2006,"
Kunches said, noting, however, that the Earth experienced a stronger radio
blackout last August.
"But en masse, if you put it all together with the geomagnetic
effects and the solar radiation effects, I would put it on par with one at the
end of the last solar cycle, which was over five years ago."
Satellites, power grids and even astronauts aboard the International
Space Station could be affected by the radiation storm, which may cause them to
seek shelter in better protected parts of the orbiting lab as they have in the
past.
"Flight surgeons in Houston's mission control center have been
monitoring the solar activity and will continue to do so," NASA spokesman
Mike Curie said.
"They have determined that there presently is no concern for the
six crew members aboard the International Space Station."
However, Kunches said some commercial airlines have already taken
actions to reroute and fly further away from the poles.
And more such storms could follow in the coming days because region
1429 is expected to stay active, he said.
Geomagnetic and radiation storms are growing more frequent as the Sun
leaves its solar minimum period and moves into a solar maximum over the coming
years, but people are generally protected by Earth's magnetic field.
"The current increase in the number of X-class flares is part of
the Sun's normal 11-year solar cycle, during which activity on the Sun ramps up
to solar maximum, which is expected to peak in late 2013," the US space
agency said.
However, some experts are concerned that because the world is more
reliant on GPS and satellite technology now than it was during the last solar
maximum, more disruptions to modern life are likely.
Space storms are not new. The first major solar flare was recorded by
British astronomer Richard Carrington in 1859.
Other solar geomagnetic storms have been observed in recent decades.
One huge solar flare in 1972 cut off long-distance telephone communication in
the midwestern state of Illinois, NASA said.
Another similar flare in 1989 "provoked geomagnetic storms that
disrupted electric power transmission" and caused blackouts across the
Canadian province of Quebec, according to the US space agency said.
AFP
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