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Solar Storm Preparations Said Poor, Putting Earth At Risk

Posted: 04/19/2012 10:10 am Updated: 04/19/2012 10:10 am

Solar Storm

By: Mike Wall
Published: 04/18/2012 01:07 PM EDT on SPACE.com

Humanity needs to be much better prepared for massive solar storms, which can wreak havoc on our technology-dependent society, a prominent researcher warns.

Powerful blasts from the sun have triggered intense geomagnetic storms on Earth before, and they'll do so again. But at the moment our ability to predict these events and guard against their worst consequences — which can include interruptions of power grids and satellite navigation systems — is lacking, says Mike Hapgood of the British research and technology agency RAL Space.

"We need a much better understanding of the likelihood of space weather disruptions and their impacts, and we need to develop that knowledge quickly," Hapgood, head of RAL Space's space environment group, writes in a commentary in the April 19 issue of the journal Nature.

Potentially devastating storms

The solar storms we need to worry about, Hapgood says, are coronal mass ejections, huge clouds of charged solar plasma that can rocket into space at speeds of 3 million mph (5 million kilometers per hour) or more.

CMEs that hit Earth inject large amounts of energy into the planet's magnetic field, spawning potentially devastating geomagnetic storms that can disrupt GPS signals, radio communications and power grids for days. [The Worst Solar Storms in History]

The world witnessed such effects not too long ago. In March 1989, a CME caused a power blackout in Quebec, leaving 5 million Canadians in the dark in cold weather for hours. The event caused about $2 billion in damages and lost business, Hapgood writes.

But CMEs are capable of much greater mischief. A huge ejection — now known as the Carrington event, after a British astronomer— slammed into Earth in 1859, setting off fires in telegraph offices. The world was not technologically advanced enough yet to suffer worse consequences, Hapgood noted.

"If we had a repeat of the Carrington event, I would expect several days of economic and social mayhem as many critical technological systems failed – e.g., localized power grid failures in many countries, widespread loss of GPS signals for navigation and timing, disruption of communications systems, shutdown of long-haul aviation," Hapgood told SPACE.com via email.

And the short-term problems caused by such a storm could pale in comparison with its long-term impact, he added.

"What scares me is the possibility that this recovery could take a long time in many parts of the world," Hapgood said. "Over the past few decades, we have become much more dependent on technology to sustain our everyday lives: e.g., electricity to pump clean water to our homes and remove sewage, just-in-time supply chains to feed us, ATMs and retail card readers to provide money for everyday shopping. Do we know how to recover quickly from the simultaneous disruption of a huge range of systems?"

Improving predictions

Despite a growing sense of concern among scientists — and decision-makers in politics and industry — our technology-dependent society remains vulnerable to a big CME-spawned geomagnetic storm, Hapgood says. [Photos: Huge Solar Flare Eruptions of 2012]

For starters, our forecasting ability, while improving, is still lacking. The United States' Space Weather Prediction Center (SWPC) can currently provide warnings of strong geomagnetic storms 10 to 60 minutes in advance with about 50 percent accuracy, Hapgood writes. That's a pretty small window for power companies to take protective measures.

SWPC scientists and other space-weather forecasters generally rely on observtions of approaching CMEs made by a handful of spacecraft. These include NASA's Advanced Composition Explorer (ACE) and Solar Terrestrial Rela­tions Observatory (STEREO) probes, as well as the NASA/European Space Agency Solar and Heliospheric Observatory (SOHO).

ACE launched in 1997, SOHO in 1995 and the twin STEREO craft in 2006. It's time for an upgrade, Hapgood told SPACE.com.

"We really need to replace those spacecraft and their instruments that monitor CMEs and, if possible, upgrade the instruments so they are optimized for space weather monitoring – essentially to pull out the most critical data and get it back to Earth as soon as possible," he said.

Preparing for the worst

The 1989 event spurred some power companies to require that all new transformers be able to withstand storms of similar magnitude.

But Hapgood thinks power, aviation and other vulnerable industries  — including finance, which depends on precise GPS time stamps for automatic trading — should take a longer view and guard against the huge storm that comes along just once every 1,000 years or so.

That's tough to do, since researchers don't know what a thousand-year storm might look like; data on such dramatic events are pretty hard to come by. But Hapgood says scientists could get a better idea by analyzing more data, including observations from a century or more ago.

Much of this historical information exists on paper only. Digitizing it would bring these records to the attention of many more researchers, Hapgood says, and he suggests enlisting citizen scientists to do the job on the Internet, much as the Galaxy Zoo project asks volunteers to classify galaxies online by the galaxies' shapes.

Researchers also need to develop better physics-based models to improve their understanding of extreme space weather, Hapgood says. And he suggests that studying storms on other, sunlike stars could be helpful, too.

In general, Hapgood is calling for powerful geomagnetic storms to be regarded as natural hazards similar to big earthquakes and volcanic eruptions: infrequent, potentially devastating events.

"These events often transcend the experience of any individual because they happen so rarely. Thus there is an all-too-human tendency to ignore them — that they lie outside the awareness of the decision-maker and probably will not occur during his term of office," Hapgood said. "But these events will happen sometime. We need to understand them and decide how far we should (i.e., can afford to) protect against them — and definitely not leave them until it's too late."

You can follow SPACE.com senior writer Mike Wall on Twitter: @michaeldwall. Follow SPACE.com for the latest in space science and exploration news on Twitter @Spacedotcom and on Facebook.

Copyright 2012 SPACE.com, a TechMediaNetwork company. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

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By: Mike Wall Published: 04/18/2012 01:07 PM EDT on SPACE.com Humanity needs to be much better prepared for massive solar storms, which can wreak havoc on our technology-dependent society, a pro...
By: Mike Wall Published: 04/18/2012 01:07 PM EDT on SPACE.com Humanity needs to be much better prepared for massive solar storms, which can wreak havoc on our technology-dependent society, a pro...
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Ossit
Ossit
02:00 PM on 04/23/2012
A solar storm is gonna do what a solar storm is gonna do. We can predict them, but we can't prevent them. Be it a solar storm or Nuclear War, we'll eventually eat static anyway. To be honest, people who virus computer systems are more of a concern than any solar storm to me.
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erebus99
Violence is the last refuge of the incompetent
04:40 PM on 04/21/2012
Behind all the bogus "2012" hype and doomsday hysteria is something that's still pretty scary. The projections in the Severe Space Weather Report weren't based on a repeat of the Carrington Event - they looked at a repeat of the Super Flare of May,1921, and predicted a collapse of worldwide power grids with large parts of this country cut off for six to ten years.
In one way we ARE prepared for the worst - the military has been studying the effects of EMP's since the 50's. Most of the communications infrastructure built for national emergencies would be left intact. Our satellites would give the government a 14 to 16 hour window to respond, not 10 to 60 minutes. The flash of an X-class solar flare takes 8 minutes to get here, but at only 3 million mph the CME would take 30. The Carrington CME was unusually fast and it still took 14 hours - I believe the average is over 20 - and we can clearly see when one is headed directly at us.
I think it likely that by the time the rest of us got the news it would come in the form of martial law. The average city has a 3 day supply of food, and most rely on wells for water.

Food for thought - the CME that just missed us in 2003 was almost 3 times bigger than the 1921 flare.
04:28 AM on 04/21/2012
When something like this happens, I think my biggest concern would be all the power plants.
What happens after 3-4 weeks? I wouldn't think that would end well.
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cheaptrick00
socialism = spending OTHERS money!!!
03:41 PM on 04/20/2012
BTW, Barry is working on a way to blame Bush for this problem
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
HoratioGalt
Do not think, or speak, or write with moderation.
03:02 PM on 04/21/2012
Zing?
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cheaptrick00
socialism = spending OTHERS money!!!
03:40 PM on 04/20/2012
any chance of worrying about something that we can actually change the course of events?? Solar flairs, astroid strikes etc, etc, etc....what a snooze
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HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
CabinAgue
We are ALL in this together.
09:16 AM on 04/21/2012
They may be dramatic, but they are "flares" not "flairs".  And it's "asteroid"....

And being prepared with backup plans for our most needed systems of infrastructure (along with sufficient food, clean water, etc.) doesn't strike me as impossible.

Perhaps we could worry about education, critical thinking?
Al Schrader
Don't limit your potential
06:06 AM on 04/20/2012
Underground powerlines are not effected.
ThinkCreeps
Seriously, it's time.
03:36 PM on 04/20/2012
A...ffected.

Yes they are, unless they're really quite deep.
01:10 AM on 04/20/2012
This has been talked about for years. As usual our government is not prepared or updated any of our electircal grid to be able to withstand one of these. The only transformer maker and repairer is now in Europe and the US has not bought a back -up supply of them. There use to be a company in the United States that made these. But, I will bet dollars to congressional donuts. That they perfered to buy from the European company as usual. We in this country have to get smart. The Marshall Plan rebuilt Europe and thier industry. To modern standards. We need to do the same here. Even to our coal plants. and use our coal for exporting if possible. Re-build our old steel mills that employeed thousands and inturn gave jobs to others. Get back to rebulding our own plants with the new technologies that we are sending abroad.Re-build our inferstructure and don't have the chinese do it. Use American companies hiring American workers using american steel. Time to take care of our house here at home.Yes it will take some years but it will put millions back to work.And, Make Obama resigne those Federal Oil Leases that he canceled. Lets use every drop of our own products.Also we need to build more refineries to turn that into fuel. We have not built a new refinery in decades.Now is the time to do some home repair with our own resouces.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Rideropurplesage
Et lux in tenebres lucet
12:37 AM on 04/20/2012
...and who would think of cannibalism with all that bar b-q layin' around....... pass the sauce....
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luellawhewei
12:01 AM on 04/20/2012
I have tried explaining how the modern world would be crippled without electricity to my children. They don't seem to get it. We are so dependent on electricity that chaos would quickly erupt and things would get ugly really quick! Sounds like the makings of a disaster movie.. Hmmmmm
12:23 AM on 04/20/2012
Pick a weekend and Friday before they come home from school cut the power from the main panel box. Go the whole weekend without power and stay home all weekend give them a little taste of what it would be like. I know it would only serve as a small taste as they know the power would come back on but they would get some idea of how it would be.
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HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
CabinAgue
We are ALL in this together.
09:24 AM on 04/21/2012
The worst of that (for me) would be the food in the freezer.  Hopefully we would have sufficient propane for the bbq and we could cook at least some of it.  Eventually, though, even what we cooked would spoil.  In the winter, of course, we could solve that problem but the lack of heat would be impossible to ignore!

Anyway, it would be hard to do that (weekend without power), but we have been without power for awhile before and so we'd similarly grumble.  But that's been true for only very small local situation (neighborhood).  A large area (stores, etc. -- all infrastructure -- whole city) being without for an extended period are something I think most of us, even adults, can barely grasp.

It would be a big deal.

(And I don't dislike your idea.)
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luellawhewei
04:36 PM on 04/21/2012
Ha! They would go insane!
11:43 PM on 04/19/2012
Chicken Little has a great law suit (theft of intellectual property) against this guy!
10:51 PM on 04/19/2012
This is part of man made Global Warming and to save yourselves you have to give me all your money so that Louis Farrakhan can save us from the great flood from all the melting ice and then on December 22 gather on top of Mt Washington to be beamed up!
CaseyComo
Less jaw, more brain.
11:11 PM on 04/19/2012
Um...LOL?
11:40 PM on 04/19/2012
Will you take a check?
This user has chosen to opt out of the Badges program
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124pythias
My dogma got run over by a karma.
10:41 PM on 04/19/2012
Mongo not afraid- Mongo still have FIRE!
11:17 PM on 04/19/2012
Mongo might BE on fire!
10:11 PM on 04/19/2012
The Grid is not prepared for a super-nova.
ThinkCreeps
Seriously, it's time.
03:38 PM on 04/20/2012
The debris from a supernova would arrive centuries after the supernova, so there'd be plenty of warning.
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zelda777
transcend the B. S.
10:05 PM on 04/19/2012
“The Maya have NEVER said "the world is going to end" in 2012. That has always been a completely ignorant misinterpretation of their calendar, which few modern people understand. The Maya actually have 17 calendars; the one in focus is based on 5125-yr. cycles which are delineated by...major solar flare activity which we are already seeing. The Maya have known this for eons.

This calendar will end this year, but another will begin - that of the 5th Sun. Great changes are in store. The major solar flare activity might cause major power outages which may seem like the end of the world because the entire modern world depends on electricity for everything. There will be more heat, more extreme weather, more earthquakes.

However, the increased solar activity will also beam ultra-high frequencies to our planet influencing the neuronal programming of humans in a beneficial way to help the species evolve to a higher level, whether they know it or not. What will follow is a new era of peace and harmony. The changes will be like major birth pangs, sometimes traumatic and painful, as the new replaces the old.

I live in Mexico and have learned this directly from a Mayan messenger.

http://travel.webshots.com/slideshow/582222981xLJqqw

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4lqkcOh9Cmg

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=cj-vyXs2uko&feature=related

http://www.actah2012.com/

http://caminantemaya.com/?modulo=inicio
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
starchildjg24
Balance, Logic and Humor Rule
11:31 PM on 04/19/2012
Thank you very much! I am thrilled to get a new and original conspiracy theory for my research! How did the Mayan messenger arrive? Did you tip him? (Or her)
Very clever post.
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zelda777
transcend the B. S.
11:59 PM on 04/20/2012
Smarty pants - did you actually check out the links??? Nothing clever about it. Just very advanced information that you are not ready for yet.
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HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
CabinAgue
We are ALL in this together.
08:33 PM on 04/21/2012
The part about the calendars is correct (that one ends and a new one begins -- it's just like what we do every 12 months, only on a macro level).  I'll grant you that that last part seems, well, a bit far-fetched.
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rikster
buy the ticket-take the ride
09:53 PM on 04/19/2012
grow food....get low tech,..