The Prague Post - 'Danger behind the beauty': more solar storms could be heading our way

EUR -
AED 4.307969
AFN 81.52987
ALL 97.004799
AMD 448.979058
ANG 2.099477
AOA 1075.672451
ARS 1680.62949
AUD 1.760494
AWG 2.114395
AZN 1.991249
BAM 1.962961
BBD 2.361716
BDT 142.700612
BGN 1.954748
BHD 0.442321
BIF 3459.86544
BMD 1.173035
BND 1.506998
BOB 8.10256
BRL 6.321493
BSD 1.172578
BTN 103.678924
BWP 15.713058
BYN 3.969381
BYR 22991.47741
BZD 2.358304
CAD 1.623298
CDF 3364.850192
CHF 0.933812
CLF 0.028492
CLP 1117.713987
CNY 8.350422
CNH 8.344411
COP 4570.459372
CRC 591.048755
CUC 1.173035
CUP 31.085416
CVE 110.861177
CZK 24.361603
DJF 208.472025
DKK 7.464206
DOP 74.49022
DZD 152.1767
EGP 56.570418
ERN 17.595518
ETB 167.919473
FJD 2.622556
FKP 0.865936
GBP 0.86428
GEL 3.155156
GGP 0.865936
GHS 14.322238
GIP 0.865936
GMD 83.871574
GNF 10158.479671
GTQ 8.982772
GYD 245.325015
HKD 9.136578
HNL 30.686577
HRK 7.532878
HTG 153.550195
HUF 391.547795
IDR 19262.752448
ILS 3.897583
IMP 0.865936
INR 103.541356
IQD 1536.675276
IRR 49355.429032
ISK 143.192322
JEP 0.865936
JMD 187.744947
JOD 0.831708
JPY 172.717059
KES 151.906733
KGS 102.581939
KHR 4696.830541
KMF 492.107047
KPW 1055.71991
KRW 1629.930109
KWD 0.358116
KYD 0.977148
KZT 632.166321
LAK 25425.52382
LBP 105045.245357
LKR 353.891095
LRD 234.313548
LSL 20.364311
LTL 3.463666
LVL 0.709557
LYD 6.340271
MAD 10.571681
MDL 19.482746
MGA 5243.464328
MKD 61.508235
MMK 2462.886186
MNT 4218.993831
MOP 9.407982
MRU 46.838693
MUR 53.443747
MVR 18.070609
MWK 2037.560841
MXN 21.679673
MYR 4.941407
MZN 74.955881
NAD 20.363807
NGN 1764.40816
NIO 43.051268
NOK 11.568027
NPR 165.888207
NZD 1.962958
OMR 0.451039
PAB 1.172578
PEN 4.08688
PGK 4.909141
PHP 67.014261
PKR 330.326215
PLN 4.254365
PYG 8399.644277
QAR 4.270437
RON 5.071729
RSD 117.147389
RUB 99.136237
RWF 1696.207976
SAR 4.400641
SBD 9.64677
SCR 16.655422
SDG 705.576717
SEK 10.924717
SGD 1.503598
SHP 0.921821
SLE 27.431381
SLL 24597.945861
SOS 670.38201
SRD 46.654523
STD 24279.44708
STN 24.868333
SVC 10.260433
SYP 15251.623656
SZL 20.463598
THB 37.208338
TJS 11.121976
TMT 4.105621
TND 3.40053
TOP 2.747368
TRY 48.502282
TTD 7.963953
TWD 35.54893
TZS 2885.664512
UAH 48.465616
UGX 4116.016391
USD 1.173035
UYU 46.931218
UZS 14621.875966
VES 184.789976
VND 30971.045016
VUV 139.700619
WST 3.185852
XAF 658.358879
XAG 0.028284
XAU 0.000323
XCD 3.170185
XCG 2.11331
XDR 0.818381
XOF 656.306793
XPF 119.331742
YER 281.057782
ZAR 20.373501
ZMK 10558.730761
ZMW 27.936922
ZWL 377.71665
  • RBGPF

    0.0000

    77.27

    0%

  • RYCEF

    0.2500

    15.12

    +1.65%

  • CMSD

    0.0500

    24.39

    +0.21%

  • RIO

    0.4400

    62.54

    +0.7%

  • GSK

    0.9800

    41.48

    +2.36%

  • SCS

    0.2800

    17

    +1.65%

  • CMSC

    0.0800

    24.38

    +0.33%

  • RELX

    1.2000

    46.33

    +2.59%

  • VOD

    0.2100

    11.86

    +1.77%

  • AZN

    0.2900

    81.1

    +0.36%

  • BTI

    1.0500

    57.31

    +1.83%

  • JRI

    0.1000

    14.12

    +0.71%

  • NGG

    0.3900

    71.07

    +0.55%

  • BCC

    3.1400

    89.01

    +3.53%

  • BCE

    0.1600

    24.3

    +0.66%

  • BP

    -0.2900

    34.47

    -0.84%

'Danger behind the beauty': more solar storms could be heading our way
'Danger behind the beauty': more solar storms could be heading our way / Photo: Sanka Vidanagama - AFP/File

'Danger behind the beauty': more solar storms could be heading our way

Tourists normally have to pay big money and brave cold climates for a chance to see an aurora, but last weekend many people around the world simply had to look up to see these colourful displays dance across the sky.

Text size:

Usually banished to the poles of Earth, the auroras strayed as far as Mexico, southern Europe and South Africa on the evening of May 10, delighting skygazers and filling social media with images of exuberant pinks, greens and purples.

But for those charged with protecting Earth from powerful solar storms such as the one that caused the auroras, a threat lurks beneath the stunning colours.

"We need to understand that behind this beauty, there is danger," Quentin Verspieren, the European Space Agency's space safety programme coordinator, told AFP.

Mike Bettwy of the US Space Weather Prediction Center said that "we're focused on the more sinister potential impacts" of solar storms, such as taking out power grids and satellites, or exposing astronauts to dangerous levels of radiation.

The latest auroras were caused by the most powerful geomagnetic storm since the "Halloween Storms" of October 2003, which sparked blackouts in Sweden and damaged power infrastructure in South Africa.

There appears to have been less damage from the latest solar storms, though it often takes weeks for satellite companies to reveal problems, Bettwy said.

There were reports that some self-driving farm tractors in the United States stopped in their tracks when their GPS guidance systems went out due to the storm, he told AFP.

- 'Definitely not over' -

These strange effects are caused by massive explosions on the surface of the Sun that shoot out plasma, radiation and even magnetic fields at incredibly fast speeds born on the solar wind.

The recent activity has come from a sunspot cluster 17 times the size of Earth which has continued raging over the week. On Tuesday it blasted out the strongest solar flare seen in years.

The sunspot has been turning towards the edge of the Sun's disc, so activity is expected to die down in the short term as its outbursts aim away from our planet.

But in roughly two weeks the sunspot will swing back around, again turning its gaze towards Earth.

In the meantime, another sunspot is "coming into view right now" which could trigger "major activity in the coming days", ESA space weather service coordinator Alexi Glover told AFP.

So the solar activity is "definitely not over", she added.

It is difficult to predict how violent these sunspots could be -- or whether they could spark further auroras.

But solar activity is only just approaching the peak of its roughly 11-year cycle, so the odds of another major storm are highest "between now and the end of next year", Bettwy said.

- What threat do solar storms pose? -

Geomagnetic storms such as the recent one create a magnetic charge of voltage and current, "essentially overloading" things like satellites and power grids, according to Bettwy.

The most famous example came in 1859 during the worst solar storm in recorded history, called the Carrington Event.

As well as stunning auroras, the storm caused sparks to fly off of telegraph stations. The charge that originated from the Sun was so strong that some telegraphs worked without being plugged into a power source.

So what would happen if such a powerful geomagnetic storm struck Earth again?

Bettwy said most countries have improved their power grids, which should prevent prolonged outages like those that hit Sweden in 2003 or Canada in 1989.

Still, he suggested people have an emergency kit in case electricity is knocked out for a day or two. Fresh water might also help in case filtration plants go offline.

Astronauts are particularly at risk from radiation during extreme solar activity. Those on the International Space Station usually take the best shelter they can when a bad storm is expected.

Bettwy said a massive solar storm could expose astronauts to an "unhealthy dose" of radiation, but he did not think it would be lethal.

Emphasising that he did not want to "instil fear", Bettwy added that radiation can also potentially "get through the fuselage" of planes flying near the north pole.

Airlines sometimes change routes during extreme solar storms to avoid this happening, he added.

Several upcoming missions are expected to improve forecasting of the Sun's intense and unpredictable weather, aiming to give Earth more time to prepare.

R.Krejci--TPP