Second solar storm hits earth ( 2003-10-31 11:43) (Agencies)
A second huge magnetic solar storm hit Earth on Thursday, just a day after an
earlier one hurtled into the planet in what one astronomer called an
unprecedented one-two punch.
This image
photographed at 6:30 AM Alaska Standard Time, October 29, 2003 shows
aurora near Eureka, Alaska over the Chugach mountains, about 110 miles
northeast of Anchorage. The orange in the photo is not aurora, but the
sunrise. The twilight affects the color of the aurora, giving them more of
a pastel color, and also shifted the common green aurora to a light blue.
A second huge magnetic solar storm hit Earth October 30, just a day after
an earlier one hurtled into the planet in what one astronomer called an
unprecedented one-two punch. [Reuters]
"It's
like the Earth is looking right down the barrel of a giant gun pointed at us by
the sun ... and it's taken two big shots at us," said John Kohl of the
Harvard-Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics in Massachusetts.
Kohl, the lead investigator for an instrument aboard NASA's sun-watching SOHO
spacecraft, said the probability of two huge flares aimed directly at Earth
coming so close together, as they have this week, was "unprecedented ... so low
that it is a statistical anomaly."
While such solar storms do not directly endanger humans, the charged
particles can play havoc with electric grids, satellites and other equipment.
They can also create spectacular displays of the northern and southern lights.
To brace for any possible energy surges, power plants from Sweden to New
Jersey cut production to limit how much electricity was flowing over
transmission grids. A Japanese communications satellite temporarily stopped
operations earlier in the week.
Kohl said the second solar storm, known as a coronal mass ejection, peeled
off the sun around 4 p.m. EST Wednesday. Charged particles from the ejection
started arriving at Earth around 10 a.m. EST Thursday.
This was just a day after an earlier ejection was first detected on Earth,
arriving around 1 a.m. EST Wednesday.
MOVING FASTER
The second blast from the sun was moving even faster than the first one did,
and some particles from the first linger even as the second onslaught continues,
Kohl said in a telephone interview.
Kohl said the first storm traveled at a top speed of 4.9 million miles per
hour, while the one that hit on Thursday moved at 5.2 million miles an hour.
Solar activity is shown in an image made October 24, 2003 by
the LASCO C3 instrument onboard the SOHO spacecraft. The Earth's magnetic
field was bombarded with extra energy from the Sun on Oct. 24 when a
geomagnetic storm sent charged particles that affected electric utilities,
airline communications and satellite navigation systems.
[NASA]
The National Oceanic and
Atmospheric Administration (NOAA), which runs the U.S. early warning center for
such solar events, said that Wednesday's storm prompted a report that northern
lights had been seen as far south as El Paso, Texas.
The X-ray and solar radiation storms rank as the second largest such events
recorded in the latest 11-year cycle, according to NOAA data. Records of solar
cycles date from 1755. This is the tail end of the 23rd cycle.
Wednesday's geomagnetic particle storm measured G5, or extreme, making it one
of the three or four strongest such storms in the latest 11-year cycle. By
contrast, Kohl said the storm that hit on Thursday was a K8, still substantial
but not as intense as the previous one.
An astronomer at the University of Iowa even managed to detect the sounds
made by the first storm: a clicking noise that resembled an old-fashioned
telegraph, followed by a whoosh that sounded like a jet engine.
Don Gurnett, a space physicist at the university, said in a statement these
sounds of the solar flare were picked up on Tuesday by NASA's Cassini spacecraft
as it headed for a rendezvous with Saturn and its moons.