Solar activity can wreak havoc in communications systems -- particularly
during coronal mass ejections, when plumes of electrically charged
particles hit earth's atmosphere. Scientists can now track the plumes
down to the single affected cities, helping to predict disruptions.
WESTFORD, Mass.--The sun guides our daily routine and impacts us in
ways you may not even notice. In fact, the sun can play havoc with our
communications systems. Now, a new discovery may help predict when and
where this will happen and help keep your cell phone static free.
TVs, radios, cell phones -- modern-day conveniences most of us can't
live without, but solar activity could jeopardize our way of life.
During coronal mass ejections, electrically charged particles from the
sun collide with earth's atmosphere.
John Foster, a space physicist at the Massachusetts Institute of
Technology's Haystack Observatory in Westford, Mass., says, "This
material flies through inner-stellar space and impacts the Earth like a
solar hammer hitting the Earth's magnetic field." This solar hammer can
cause communication disruptions on the ground and a plume of
electrically charged particles high in the earth's atmosphere.
Now, atmospheric scientists at MIT may have discovered a way to predict
space weather disruptions by identifying these plumes over the United
States.
"What we are seeing is a pattern in where these plumes are forming,"
says Anthea Coster, an atmospheric research scientist at MIT Haystack
Observatory.
Scientists hope to detect these patterns with the ISIS instrument. ISIS
picks up radio signals and measures plume movement. Then, a
supercomputer processes this data, which will alert scientists where the
plumes occur, pinpointing down to the state -- even city -- that will
be affected.
Foster says, "Predicting these would be a great benefit to any systems
users, people who really rely on communications or navigation systems.
Military operations, for one, would very much like to know what the
space weather conditions would be like tomorrow."
Scientists say in the near future ISIS instruments will be distributed throughout the United States.
BACKGROUND: Bursts of matter from
the sun, called coronal mass ejections (CMEs), have long been known to
affect cell phone reception, TV and radio signals, and how much
radiation exposure we receive while flying in the upper atmosphere. Now,
researchers have detected plumes that tell them where the radiation
form the ejection is concentrated and what places will be influenced the
most by the CME.
CME OR SOLAR FLARE?: People sometimes confuse CMEs with solar
flares, but they are different phenomena. Solar flares are explosions on
the sun that occur when energy build up around sunspots, becoming so
hot -- millions of degrees Fahrenheit -- that they produce a burst of
electromagnetic radiation across the entire electromagnetic spectrum,
from radio waves to x-rays and gamma rays. CMEs were once thought to be
the result of solar flares, but while they sometimes accompany solar
flares, there is no direct relation between the two. They occur when a
large bubble of plasma escapes through a star's corona and travels
through space to the earth at high speeds over the course of several
hours. If a CME collides with the earth, it can produce a geomagnetic
storm, which can cause electrical power outages and damage
communications satellites and electronic equipment. Solar flares, on the
other hand, affect radio communications.
WHAT ARE PLASMAS: A plasma is essentially electrically charged
(ionized) gas, consisting of free-moving electrons and ions (atoms that
have lost electrons). Applying a surge of energy -- with a laser, for
example -- knocks electrons off gas atoms, turning them into ions and
creating a plasma. Unless this energy is sustained, however, plasmas
will recombine back into a neutral gas. On earth, we are familiar with
the ordinary states of matter: solids, liquids and gases. But in the
universe at large, plasma is by far the most common form. Plasma in the
stars and the space between them makes up 99 percent of the visible
universe.
http://www.sciencedaily.com/videos/2006/0312-sun_darkens_electronics.htm
Home »
Science News
» Sun Darkens Electronics: Space Physicists and Atmospheric Scientists Can Now Predict Disruptions Caused by the Sun's Coronal Mass Ejections
Sun Darkens Electronics: Space Physicists and Atmospheric Scientists Can Now Predict Disruptions Caused by the Sun's Coronal Mass Ejections
Written By Unknown on Sunday, December 9, 2012 | 8:22 AM
Labels:
Science News
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
0 comments:
Post a Comment