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Do not adjust your sets: solar storms could cause blackouts at Olympics

By Steve Connor, Science Editor

Solar flares erupting from the surface of the Sun fling billions of tonnes of electrically-charged matter towards the Earth in a solar storm

ESA/ASA

Solar flares erupting from the surface of the Sun fling billions of tonnes of electrically-charged matter towards the Earth in a solar storm

With terrorist threats, dire transport links and overspent budgets you'd be forgiven for thinking that the 2012 London Olympics had enough problems to worry about. But another nightmare scenario has just been added to the Olympic dream – a communications blackout caused by solar storms.

After a period of unprecedented calm within the massive nuclear furnace that powers the Sun, scientists have detected the signs of a fresh cycle of sunspots that could peak in 2012, just in time for the arrival of the Olympic torch in London.

Over the past two years, fewer sunspots have been recorded than at any time since 1913. But now scientists have detected signs that the next cycle has begun and it could peak in two or three years.

They believe that this peak in the next solar cycle could generate the eruption of vast solar explosions that could fling billions of tonnes of charged particles towards the Earth, causing intense solar storms that could jam the telecommunications satellites and internet links transmitting live Olympic coverage from London.

"The Sun is now waking up. The first significant active regions of a new solar activity cycle are forming. In the last two weeks, we have seen the first major flares of a new cycle," said Professor Richard Harrison, head of space physics at the Rutherford Appleton Laboratory in Oxfordshire.

"The Sun's activity has a strong influence on the Earth. Space weather can affect the whole population. The recipe is right, it's the beginning of a new cycle. The Olympics could be bang in the middle of the next solar maximum which could affect the transmissions of satellites," he added.

Sunspots are the physical manifestation of the Sun's natural fluctuations in magnetic activity which operate on a roughly 11-year cycle. At the peak of the cycle, violent eruptions called coronal mass ejections occur in the Sun's atmosphere, flinging out immense quantities of electrically-charged matter.

"A coronal mass ejection can carry a billion tonnes of solar material into space at over a million kilometres per hour. Such events can expose astronauts to deadly particle doses, can disable satellites, cause grid failures on Earth and disrupt communications," Professor Harrison said.

In 1989, a solar storm caused power blackouts across the US and Canada. Orbiting satellites are especially vulnerable to the effects of solar flares erupting from the Sun's surface, and the risk is greatest during a solar maximum when there is the greatest number of sunspots.

Next week, the US National Aeronautics and Space Administration (Nasa) is scheduled to launch a satellite for monitoring solar activity called the Solar Dynamics Observatory, which will take images of the Sun that are 10 times better than high-definition television.

The Rutherford Appleton Laboratory, funded by the Science and Technology Facilities Council, helped to make the sophisticated cameras that will capture images of the solar flares and explosions as they occur.

Professor Richard Holdaway, the lab's director of space science, said that the observatory should be able to provide early warning of a solar flare or eruption big enough to affect satellite communications on Earth.

"If we have advance warning, we'll be able to mitigate the damage. What you don't want is things switching off for a week with no idea of what's caused the problem," Professor Holdaway said.

It is not possible to predict exactly when the peak in solar activity will occur or how intense it is likely to be. The most intense solar maximum in recent years occurred in 1958, when the Northern Lights were sighted as far south at Mexico on three separate occasions. But even a below-average peak in solar activity can still cause problems. The great geomagnetic storm of 1859, which set fire to telegraph offices in the United States, occurred during a cycle with a lower-than-normal number of sunspots.

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Comments

[info]bobbobbobbfry wrote:
Wednesday, 3 February 2010 at 12:49 am (UTC)
2012 was a factual film after all!!
[info]nightside242 wrote:
Wednesday, 3 February 2010 at 03:13 pm (UTC)
As was Knowing! Didn't stop them both being terrible, sadly.
Could happen
[info]comradekaff wrote:
Wednesday, 3 February 2010 at 07:09 am (UTC)

My dad (now deceased bless) was a research physicist at AERE Harwell, and his last project before he retired was working on the effects of solar flares on the systems in satellites, and how to protect equipment orbiting earth.
I think he told me that when a stream of photons bombards circuitry, everything is wrecked, certainly they found that in lab experiments, and were just waiting for a BIG flare to come along and zap stuff in orbig. I don't think they found a solution, but that was some 13 years ago when he got retired. Since then solar activity has been abnormally low, so the problem hasn't surfaced, but now, well, the sun is getting going again.

And it's not just coverage of the Olympics that's at risk, but any information transmitted by satellite. And when the photon stream stops, well, the circuits don't perk up and start working again, they are bust! Could be interesting.
solar flares
[info]trader74 wrote:
Wednesday, 3 February 2010 at 07:36 am (UTC)
Is it known that this event will have an effect on the Earths climate
Re: solar flares
[info]trader74 wrote:
Wednesday, 3 February 2010 at 07:45 am (UTC)
Sorry my first post should have read
Is it known if this event will effect the earths climate or not
How did they manage in Sydney?`
[info]rhysjaggar wrote:
Wednesday, 3 February 2010 at 10:48 am (UTC)
That was the time of the LAST solar maximum, near as dammit. Was THAT
How did they manage in Sydney?`
[info]rhysjaggar wrote:
Wednesday, 3 February 2010 at 10:49 am (UTC)
That was the time of the LAST solar maximum, near as dammit. Was THAT Olympics subject to black-outs??

How about Moscow? Don't remember interruptions then.

Please back up your claims with experience of actual happenings.

You may be right, but I'd like you to show the proof.
What happens if you have no TV ?
[info]humble_sparrow wrote:
Wednesday, 3 February 2010 at 11:07 am (UTC)
Everything we are or ever will be is defined by the Sun (not the newspaper) and we have no control over it, don't you think that is fantastic ?

No worries, no TV :-)
Ha ha ha
[info]liamvirgil wrote:
Wednesday, 3 February 2010 at 12:17 pm (UTC)
The very fabric of the universe itself is protesting against the Authoritarian Games! New Labour should accept this opportunity to give in gracefully and cancel the whole charade. The sooner they do, the sooner the tribunals can start to assess personal surcharges on olympic collaborators, to pay compensation to those who lost homes and businesses in the clearances, and those who were beaten up by Chinese secret police at the 2008 torch procession, while the collaboration committee and the Met looked on.
That's bad, but worst to come
[info]corporeal_v002 wrote:
Wednesday, 3 February 2010 at 01:18 pm (UTC)

When the magnetic poles swap around, and they do every 100 million years.

We are at the cusp of a change over. Over the last 200 years, the magnetic north has wobbled 8 degrees one way and 12 degrees the other way of true north.

That will be the "last day" as prophecised. The day when the sun rises in the West instead of the East.
Re: That's bad, but worst to come
[info]lexyboy wrote:
Wednesday, 3 February 2010 at 02:03 pm (UTC)
Surely that all depends on how you define East and West? Are they directions of spin, or simply 90-degree axes on a compass, relative to north and south? At any rate, we don't know when the magnetic field will flip or exactly what it would mean for us, so the only thing to do is research the phenomenon some more.

And not run around like Chicken Fucking Lickin, crying 'the sky is falling'
Re: That's bad, but worst to come
[info]corporeal_v002 wrote:
Wednesday, 3 February 2010 at 02:15 pm (UTC)

It's not the end of the world, just the end for mankind.

When this type of event occurs, you wont be worried about directions of spin and 90 degree axis and relative directions.

The point is we do know when these flips happen, the repetitive magnetic flips are embedded in ancient rocks around the world.

On a positive note, don't worry its not happening for at least 40 years so it should see you and me through most of our lifetimes. So just pull up a deck chair and enjoy the solar mass ejection flares.
Oh dear, you had to say 2012, didn't you
[info]larkspur_14 wrote:
Wednesday, 3 February 2010 at 05:15 pm (UTC)
Now all the Nostradamus fans and Mayan calendar kooks and assorted devotees of satellite tv's purported science and history (read crime, war and superstition) channels will get even more over-excited. And even more rubbish will be spewed, to delight of whoever makes money out of exploiting human irrationality.
[info]leyroy wrote:
Wednesday, 3 February 2010 at 10:19 pm (UTC)
I blame global warming...

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