Solar storm could spark auroras as far south as California
A different kind of storm could complicate this weekend’s plans.
For the first time since January 2005, the U.S. National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration has issued a severe geomagnetic storm watch starting Friday evening.
The category G4 watch from NOAA’s Space Weather Prediction Center signals the possibility that a concentration of energy flaring from the Sun could disturb our planet’s electromagnetic field once it reaches Earth.
SpaceWeather.com reported that the arrival of the series of at least six coronal mass ejections, or CMEs, could stretch into the weekend.
A geomagnetic storm of this size could disrupt communications, like the 2003 event that caused blackouts in Sweden and damaged South Africa’s power grid.
More promisingly, supercharged collisions of solar energy into the gas of our atmosphere creates the dazzling phenomena of aurora borealis, or the northern lights. Typically confined to polar regions, the colorful display could be visible this weekend as far south as Northern California.
U.S. regions at a similar latitude include parts of Colorado, Missouri, Illinois and Pennsylvania, for example.
“We have a very rare event on our hands,” space weather forecaster Shawn Dahl of SWPC said during a news conference Friday.
A geomagnetic storm happens when energy from solar wind — the highspeed current of atomic particles the sun is constantly flinging into space — is transferred into the electromagnetic field that surrounds Earth.
The winds of a Category 5 hurricane on our puny little planet can exceed 150 miles per hour. In contrast, solar wind averages about 870,000 miles per hour all day, every day according to NASA.
Earth’s electromagnetic field deflects the majority of these particles, save for those interactions in the polar areas that produce the northern lights. But unusually intense or concentrated eruptions of energy on the Sun’s surface can disrupt that equilibrium, causing geomagnetic storms like the one potentially headed our way.
On Wednesday morning, astronomers noted a series of solar flares and coronal mass ejections – essentially, giant explosions of energy – emanating from a massive sunspot more than 15 times the diameter of Earth.
The Space Weather Prediction Center has observed seven CMEs heading in Earth’s direction, said Mike Bettwy, operations chief at SWPC.
“Based on the data we have, all seven of these are going to be spewing that energy toward us,” Bettwy said.
The energy in these various eruptions is expected to merge and reach the Earth’s magnetic field late Friday or early Saturday.
“Our level of confidence is high that we will have an arrival of these CMEs as early as this evening,” Dahl said. The precise time they’ll arrive is less certain.
Scientists have previously warned that the strongest geomagnetic storms could wreak havoc on our power and communication systems. That is not what’s expected in this case.
Those of us here on
Earth may experience power outages and minor internet or GPS glitches, Bettwy said.
“Geomagnetic storms can impact infrastructure in near-Earth orbit and on Earth’s surface, potentially disrupting communications, the electric power grid, navigation, radio and satellite operations,”
NOAA said in a statement.