USA TODAY US Edition

Researcher­s say strong solar storm would be ‘a threat to modern society’

- Doyle Rice

It’s happened before, and it could happen again.

Roughly 2,700 years ago, an unusually powerful solar storm swept past Earth, scientists announced in a new study. Though it had little to no effect on people that long ago in a pre-industrial and pre-technologi­cal world, such an event today would cause widespread power outages along with potentiall­y disastrous communicat­ion and navigation failures.

The solar storm in 660 B.C. was about 10 times stronger than any known event in the past 70 years, study lead author Raimund Muscheler said.

A solar storm of that strength would be “a threat to modern society in terms of communicat­ion and navigation systems, space technologi­es and commercial aircraft operations,” the study says.

Scientists studied ancient ice in Greenland to uncover clues about solar storms. Looking at an ice core that dated as far back as 100,000 years, researcher­s found radioactiv­e isotopes that indicated a powerful solar storm 2,700 years ago.

“If that solar storm had occurred today, it could have had severe effects on our high-tech society,” said Muscheler, a geologist at Lund University in Sweden.

Two examples of recent severe solar storms that caused extensive power outages took place in Quebec, Canada, in 1989 and Malmo, Sweden, in 2003.

Solar storms are made up of high-energy particles unleashed from the sun by explosions on the star’s surface. Such storms are part of what’s known as space weather, when energy that blasts off from the sun interacts with the Earth’s atmosphere and geomagneti­c field. Separate but related space phenomena are known as geomagneti­c storms.

The only visible effect on Earth from space weather is typically the aurora borealis, or northern lights, across Canada and the northern USA.

Scientists said the discovery is the third known record of a massive solar storm in historical times. That indicates that although the storms are rare, they are a naturally recurring effect of solar activity.

“That’s why we must increase society’s protection against solar storms,” Muscheler said. “Our research suggests that the risks are currently underestim­ated. We need to be better prepared.”

The study was published Monday in the peer-reviewed journal Proceeding­s of the National Academy of Sciences.

 ?? NASA/SDO/EPA ?? An especially potent solar storm could cause widespread power outages and navigation failures.
NASA/SDO/EPA An especially potent solar storm could cause widespread power outages and navigation failures.

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