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Shecoda
06-24-2005, 12:51 AM
A New Kind of Solar Storm

Going to the Moon? Be careful. A new kind of solar storm can take you by surprise.

June 10, 2005: January 2005 was a stormy month--in space. With little warning, a giant spot materialized on the sun and started exploding. Between January 15th and 19th, sunspot 720 produced four powerful solar flares. When it exploded a fifth time on January 20th, onlookers were not surprised.

They should have been. Researchers realize now that the January 20th blast was something special. It has shaken the foundations of space weather theory and, possibly, changed the way astronauts are going to operate when they return to the Moon.

Sunspot 720 unleashed a new kind of solar storm.

Scant minutes after the January 20th flare, a swarm of high-speed protons surrounded Earth and the Moon. Thirty minutes later, the most intense proton storm in decades was underway.

"We've been hit by strong proton storms before, but [never so quickly]," says solar physicist Robert Lin of UC Berkeley. "Proton storms normally develop hours or even days after a flare." This one began in minutes.

Right: The Jan. 20th proton storm photographed from space by the Solar and Heliospheric Observatory (SOHO). The many speckles are solar protons striking the spacecraft's digital camera. [More]

Proton storms cause all kinds of problems. They interfere with ham radio communications. They zap satellites, causing short circuits and computer reboots. Worst of all, they can penetrate the skin of space suits and make astronauts feel sick.

"An astronaut on the Moon, caught outdoors on January 20th, would have had almost no time to dash for shelter," says Lin. The storm came fast and "hard," with proton energies exceeding 100 million electron volts. These are the kind of high-energy particles that can do damage to human cells and tissue.

"The last time we saw a storm like this was in February 1956." The details of that event are uncertain, though, because it happened before the Space Age. "There were no satellites watching the sun."

According to space weather theory--soon to be revised--this is how a proton storm develops:

It begins with an explosion, usually above a sunspot. Sunspots are places where strong magnetic fields poke through the surface of the Sun. For reasons no one completely understands, these fields can become unstable and explode, unleashing as much energy as 10 billion hydrogen bombs.

From Earth we see a flash of light and X-rays. This is the "solar flare," and it's the first sign that an explosion has occurred. Light from the flare reaches Earth in only 8 minutes.

Next, if the explosion is powerful enough, a billion-ton cloud of gas billows away from the blast site. This is the coronal mass ejection or "CME." CMEs are relatively slow. Even the fastest ones, traveling one to two thousand km/s, take a day or so to reach Earth. You know a CME has just arrived when you see auroras in the sky.

En route to Earth, CMEs plow through a lot of gaseous material, first in the sun's atmosphere and then out in interplanetary space. You thought space was empty? No. The void between planets is filled with protons and other particles from the solar wind. Shock waves in front of the CME can accelerate these protons in our direction--hence the proton storm.

"CMEs can account for most proton storms," says Lin, but not the proton storm of January 20th. According to theory, CMEs can't push material to Earth quickly enough.

Back to the drawing board: If a CME didn't accelerate the protons, what did?

"We have an important clue," says Lin. When the explosion occurred, sunspot 720 was located at a special place on the sun: 60o west longitude. This means "the sunspot was magnetically connected to Earth."

He explains: The sun's magnetic field spirals out into the solar system like water from a lawn sprinkler. (Why? The sun spins like a lawn sprinkler does.) The magnetic field emerging from solar longitude 60o W bends around and intersects Earth. Protons are guided by magnetic force fields so, on January 20th, there was a superhighway for protons leading all the way from sunspot 720 to our planet.

"That's how the protons got here," speculates Lin. How they were accelerated, however, remains a mystery.

What does all this mean for astronauts? Stay inside when there's a big sunspot located near solar longitude 60o W. Or, if you must go moonwalking, take a radiation shelter with you. It's not as hard as it sounds.

Stay tuned for more on this topic in an upcoming Science@NASA story, "Radiation Shelters: Don't Leave Home Without One."

http://science.nasa.gov/headlines/y2005/10jun_newstorm.htm


Hmmmmm. Wasn't there something in one of the Indian legends (Hopi? or Mayan?) about earth changes when there is a new light from the sun? Does this qualify if one allows an adjustment in the the meaning of light to the limited vernacular of the time?

BadBoy
06-24-2005, 12:54 AM
That sounds like we are getting and closer and closer to the solar "kill" shot!

maryals
07-12-2005, 04:49 AM
Yes, IMNSHO Shecoda and BadBoy are both right. Mitch Battros forecast that Dennis would land as a high Cat3 or low Cat4 and that it did, Hurricane Dennis was devastating. All because of the sun.
Thanks you 2, keep up the good work :yup:

MaryAlice :beerchug:

Topper
07-14-2005, 01:59 PM
I'm wondering what the solar storm did this morning ... had a vision of a large earthquake. It does make you wonder if Mitch is correct now doesn't it?

True Wireless
07-14-2005, 06:28 PM
A New Kind of Solar Storm


"We have an important clue," says Lin. When the explosion occurred, sunspot 720 was located at a special place on the sun: 60o west longitude. This means "the sunspot was magnetically connected to Earth."

He explains: The sun's magnetic field spirals out into the solar system like water from a lawn sprinkler. (Why? The sun spins like a lawn sprinkler does.) The magnetic field emerging from solar longitude 60o W bends around and intersects Earth. Protons are guided by magnetic force fields so, on January 20th, there was a superhighway for protons leading all the way from sunspot 720 to our planet.

"That's how the protons got here," speculates Lin. How they were accelerated, however, remains a mystery.

This section I find most interesting. Personally I am not so concerned about astronauts as for we humans living on Earth. Major Dames if I recall correctly said this was the shot across the bow that BB mentioned above. Now that could be remote viewing or just a logical extension of the Major's knowledge, or a combination of both.

The sunspot being magnetically coupled to Earth in my mind is akin to being targeted. Mind you I am just speculating on aspects that fascinate me about this matter. Since we could not live without the Sun we humans have always been linked to it and that would mean our Earth. If you add in the notion there are no accidents then things get quite interesting.

The mystery of acceleration intrigues me. I believe I have read or heard of the theoretical possibility that faster than light travel is possible. Perhaps it is already a scientific proven thing, I don't know. If we assume faster than light speed is indeed possible, then perhaps whatever makes up such a thing would be an ideal propellant for the protons. Just a thought, afterall everything seems to be a wave or wavelength.

I also find it more than a little interesting that the magnetic field of the sun spirals out into the solar system like a lawn sprinkler. There surely must be other coordinates for each of the planets in our solar system like the 60 O west that direct connects the Sun and Earth. All planets are in cycle afterall around the Sun. There must be some form of direct connect for each of the planets.

Though I didn't quote it above, I also found it extremely interesting that at the point of "discharge" from the Sunspots that the energy can equal 10 Billion Hydrogen bombs...I surmise at the same time! Remember folks, we are only approx. 93 Million miles from the Sun here. Good grief there is a lot for our scientists to learn.