Space Weather

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Audience

Difficulty Introductory

Summary

Space weather is the collective term for time-variable phenomena in the near-Earth space environment driven by the Sun, including solar wind, coronal mass ejections (CMEs), solar energetic particle events, and their downstream effects on the geomagnetic field, ionosphere, and ground-level EM environment. Space-weather forecasting and characterisation are operational concerns of NOAA, ESA, and other national space-weather services.

Drivers

  • Solar wind: continuous outflow of plasma (~ 400 km/s, varying with solar conditions) from the Sun.
  • Coronal mass ejections (CMEs): massive plasma / magnetic-field eruptions, typically requiring 1-4 days to reach Earth, capable of producing major geomagnetic storms.
  • Solar flares: rapid electromagnetic emission events, reaching Earth in 8 minutes and immediately affecting the dayside ionosphere.
  • Solar energetic particles (SEPs): high-energy protons / heavy ions accelerated by flares and CME shocks, reaching Earth in minutes to hours, affecting satellites and polar ionosphere.
  • Coronal hole high-speed streams: lower-density, high-velocity (~ 600-800 km/s) wind from coronal magnetic-field "open" regions; produce recurring geomagnetic storms.

Effects

  • Geomagnetic storms (measured by Kp and Dst): depression of the surface geomagnetic field, ring-current intensification.
  • Ionospheric storms: ionisation enhancement / depletion, disruption of HF radio propagation.
  • Auroras: enhanced and equatorward-displaced during major storms.
  • Satellite anomalies: single-event upsets, solar-panel degradation, increased atmospheric drag on LEO satellites.
  • Power-grid risk: geomagnetically-induced currents (GICs) in long transmission lines; the 1989 Quebec storm caused a 9-hour outage.
  • Communications and navigation: HF radio outages, GPS positioning errors during storms.

Major Historical Events

  • 1859 Carrington event: the largest known geomagnetic storm in the instrumental era, observed by Richard Carrington. Telegraph systems failed worldwide; auroras seen near the equator. Modern equivalent estimated at $1-2 trillion in economic damage.
  • 1989 Quebec storm (Dst ≈ -589 nT): collapsed the Hydro-Québec grid; 6 million people without power for 9 hours.
  • 2003 Halloween storms (Dst ≈ -422 nT): widespread satellite anomalies; auroras visible to mid-latitudes.

Operational Monitoring

The principal monitoring infrastructure:

  • SOHO, ACE, DSCOVR spacecraft at the L1 Lagrange point — provide ~ 30-60 minute solar-wind warning.
  • GOES, SDO geostationary satellites — solar X-ray and EUV monitoring.
  • Worldwide magnetometer network — Kp / Dst calculation.
  • Ionospheric sounding networks — real-time ionosphere state.

NOAA's Space Weather Prediction Center (swpc.noaa.gov) is the principal US operational source.

Psionic Relevance

In the psionic framework, space-weather variables are the principal external modulators of the Earth's EM environment. The framework predicts measurable correlations between space-weather indices and ψ-field-mediated biological / consciousness phenomena. The empirical literature (Persinger et al., GCP, multiple epidemiological studies) supports this prediction at small effect sizes.

See Also

External Links

  • Wikipedia: Space weather
  • NOAA Space Weather Prediction Center.
  • ESA Space Weather Office.

References

  • Schwenn, R. (2006). "Space weather: the solar perspective." Living Reviews in Solar Physics 3: 2.
  • Pulkkinen, T. (2007). "Space weather: terrestrial perspective." Living Reviews in Solar Physics 4: 1.