The Carrington Event of 1859 offers a stark reminder of what a massive solar storm can do. During that event, telegraph operators reported sparks flying from their equipment, with some devices ...
The solar storm that battered Earth from May 7 to 10 reached the intensity of G5, the highest level on the five-step scale used by the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA ...
The Week is part of Future US Inc, an international media group and leading digital publisher. Visit our corporate site.
A coronal mass ejection (CME) from a powerful solar blast on March 1 is racing toward Earth, with the potential to spark a geomagnetic storm and subsequent impressive northern lights overnight and ...
The "severe" solar storm in effect has the potential to trigger the northern lights, causing a stunning display of colors visible from parts of the U.S. Skyler Caruso is a Writer and Reporter of ...
According to NOAA, CMEs are explosions of plasma and magnetic fields from the sun’s corona which cause geometric storms when they are directed at Earth. Getty Are Solar Storms Dangerous to ...
A rare, violent solar storm could knock out vulnerable satellite systems and leave ships stranded without navigation, ...
On May 10, 2024, people across the Northern Hemisphere got to witness the impact of these solar activities on Earth's space weather. Two merging CMEs triggered the largest geomagnetic storm in two ...
No solar superstorm as powerful as the 1859 event has occurred since, so it is difficult to calculate what impact a comparable storm might have on today’s more wired world. A hint came with the ...
G1? G3? G5? What do geomagnetic storm rankings really mean? Geomagnetic storms are capable of sparking beautiful displays of the Northern Lights across our night sky. However, there is a potential ...
On May 10, 2024, the strongest solar storm in 20 years sparked auroras on Earth that were visible as far south as Florida. It also created two new bands of radiation around the planet, researchers ...
A new artificial intelligence model trained on decades of data on the Sun’s activity would have predicted the unexpected intense solar storm that struck the Earth last year, scientists say.