Science
Related: About this forumSolar maximum could hit us harder and sooner than we thought. How dangerous will the sun's chaotic p
https://www.yahoo.com/lifestyle/solar-maximum-could-hit-us-070000837.htmlFrom a distance, the sun may seem calm and steady. But zoom in, and our home star is actually in a perpetual state of flux, transforming over time from a uniform sea of fire to a chaotic jumble of warped plasma and back again in a recurring cycle.
Every 11 years or so, the sun's magnetic field gets tangled up like a ball of tightly wound rubber bands until it eventually snaps and completely flips turning the north pole into the south pole and vice versa. In the lead-up to this gargantuan reversal, the sun amps up its activity: belching out fiery blobs of plasma, growing dark planet-size spots and emitting streams of powerful radiation.
This period of increased activity, known as solar maximum, is also a potentially perilous time for Earth, which gets bombarded by solar storms that can disrupt communications, damage power infrastructure, harm some living creatures (including astronauts) and send satellites plummeting toward the planet.
And some scientists think the next solar maximum may be coming sooner and be much more powerful than we thought.
Originally, scientists predicted that the current solar cycle would peak in 2025. But a bumper crop of sunspots, solar storms and rare solar phenomena suggest solar maximum could arrive by the end of this year at the earliest and several experts told Live Science we are poorly prepared.
We're always poorly prepared
DetroitLegalBeagle
(2,167 posts)Not directly, but in the resulting chaos of a knocked out power grid, either partial or full.
WestMichRad
(1,810 posts)Had to look that up. A fascinating bit of science history:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Carrington_Event
Youre right, a direct hit from a coronal mass ejection (CME) could damage a power grid severely. Timed right (or, make that: very wrong), it could be crippling.
Weve been lucky that CMEs in the last hundred years have not been direct hits on Earth.
Grokenstein
(5,832 posts)I remember the last one...no, wait, that's a lie. I don't remember any of them because nothing happened.
Maybe the media covered them up! No, that can't be right, my local news stations have been running special reports about how the Bay Area is well overdue for another massive earthquake every single year for...ooo, thirty years now.
LastLiberal in PalmSprings
(12,904 posts)Solar storms are non-trivial.
WhiteTara
(30,159 posts)that's a big wow.
cstanleytech
(27,006 posts)Are we talking greater than getting hit with a sharknado?
WhiteTara
(30,159 posts)and perhaps the chances are prolly equal. I'm too far south to see the light show, so I doubt I know much more about it than this.