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Sun storm to hit with 'force of
100m bombs'
By Brent McGrady
Source: www.news.com.au
AFTER
10 years of comparative slumber, the sun is waking
up - and it's got astronomers on full alert.
This week several US media outlets reported that
NASA was warning the massive flare that caused
spectacular light shows on Earth earlier this
month was just a precursor to a massive solar
storm building that had the potential to wipe
out the entire planet's power grid.
NASA has since rebutted those reports, saying
it could come "100 years away or just 100
days", but an Australian astronomer says
the space community is betting on the sooner scenario
rather than the latter.
Despite its rebuttal, NASA's been watching out
for this storm since 2006 and reports from the
US this week claim the storms
could hit on that most Hollywood of disaster dates
- 2012.
Similar
storms back in 1859 and 1921 caused worldwide
chaos, wiping out telegraph wires on a massive
scale.
The 2012 storm has the potential to be even more
disruptive.
"The general consensus among general astronomers
(and certainly solar astronomers) is that this
coming Solar maximum (2012 but possibly later
into 2013) will be the most violent in 100 years,"
astronomy lecturer and columnist Dave Reneke said.
"A bold statement and one taken seriously
by those it will affect most, namely airline companies,
communications companies and anyone working with
modern GPS systems.
"They can even trip circuit breakers and
knock out orbiting satellites, as has already
been done this year."
Regardless, the point astronomers are making
is it doesn't matter if the next Solar Max isn't
the worst in history, or even as bad as the 1859
storms.
It's the fact that there hasn't been one since
the mid-80s. Commodore had just launched the Amiga
and the only digital storm making the news was
Tetris.
No one really knows what effect the 2012-2013
Solar Max will have on today's digital-reliant
society.
Dr Richard Fisher, director of NASA’s
Heliophysics division, told Mr Reneke the super
storm would hit like "a bolt of lightning”,
causing catastrophic consequences for the world’s
health, emergency services and national security
unless precautions are taken.
US government officials earlier this year took
part in a "tabletop exercise" in Boulder,
Colorado, to map out what might happen if the
Earth was hit with a storm as intense as the 1859
and 1921 storms.
The 1859 storm was of a similar size to that
predicted by NASA to hit within the next three
years – one of decreased activity, but more
powerful eruptions.
NASA said that a recent report by the National
Academy of Sciences found that if a similar storm
occurred today, it could cause “$1 to 2
trillion in damages to society's high-tech infrastructure
and require four to 10 years for complete recovery”.
Staff at the Space Weather Prediction Center
in Colorado, which hosted the exercise, said with
our reliance on satellite technology, such an
event could hit the Earth with the magnitude
of a global hurricane or earthquake.
The reason for the concern comes as the sun enters
a phase known as Solar Cycle 24.
All the alarming news building around the event
is being fuelled by two things.
The first is a book by disaster expert Lawrence
E. Joseph, Guilty of Apocalypse: The Case Against
2012, in which he claims the "Hurricane Katrina
for the Earth" may cause unprecedented planetwide
upheaval.
The second is a theory that claims sunspots travel
through the sun on a "conveyor belt"
similar to the Great Ocean Conveyor Belt which
controls weather on Earth.
The belt carries magnetic fields through the
sun. When they hit the surface, they explode as
sunspots.
Weakened, they then travel back through the sun's
core to recharge.
It all happens on a rough 40-50-year cycle, according
to solar physicist David Hathaway of the National
Space Science and Technology Center in the US.
He says when the belt speeds up, lots of magnetic
fields are collected, which points to more intense
future activity.
"The belt was turning fast in 1986-1996,"
Prof Hathaway said.
"Old magnetic fields swept up then should
reappear as big sunspots in 2010-2011."
Most experts agree, although those who put the
date of Solar Max in 2012 are getting the most
press.
They claim satellites will be aged by 50 years,
rendering GPS even more useless than ever, and
the blast will have the equivalent energy of 100
million hydrogen bombs.
“We know it is coming but we don’t
know how bad it is going to be,” Dr Fisher
told Mr Reneke in the most
recent issue of Australasian Science.
“Systems will just not work. The flares
change the magnetic field on the Earth and it’s
rapid, just like a lightning bolt.
"That’s the solar effect.”
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