Time To Restore The Ecosystemtime To Restore The Ecosystem
Time To Restore The Ecosystemtime To Restore The Ecosystem
Time To Restore The Ecosystemtime To Restore The Ecosystem
Please stay safe, and more importantly, stay happy! A happy mind will secure greater strength T he Sun
constantly emits high-energy particles that can be hazardous to air passengers and affect satellites. These particles shoot from
the Sun at high speed during solar storms. While the Earth’s magnetic field keeps a majority of these particles at bay, preventing
them from reaching our planet, some do manage to reach, and when they do, they disrupt satellites and electronic
infrastructure, as well as posing a possible radiation risk to astronauts and people travelling in planes.
In 1859, a large solar storm called the ‘Carrington Event’ caused widespread issues with telegraph systems across
Europe and the United States. Given our reliance on electricity today, a repeat storm of such magnitude could be far
more devastating.
Till now, the source of these storms was not known with certainty. Now, researchers at University College London
(UCL) and George Mason University in the US say they have located where on the Sun these particles come from. This
may help in better predicting when they might strike again.
Their findings, published in the journal Science Advances, indicate that the particles have the same
“fingerprint” as plasma located low in the Sun’s corona, close to the middle region of the Sun’s atmosphere.
According to the scientists, they have observed for the first time “exactly where solar energetic particles come
from on the Sun”. They say their evidence supports theories that these highly charged particles originate from
plasma that has been held down low in the Sun’s atmosphere by strong magnetic fields.
Once released, these energetic particles are accelerated by eruptions that travel at a speed of a few thousand kilometres a
second. Energetic particles can arrive at Earth very quickly, within several minutes to a few hours, with these events
lasting for days.
Researchers made the discovery using measurements from NASA’s ‘Wind’ satellite, located between the Sun and Earth. They
looked at a number of solar energetic particle streams, each lasting at least a day, in January 2014. These particles came from a
region of the Sun known as ‘11944’, which had an extremely strong magnetic field.
Billions of tonnes of magnetised plasma are periodically ejected into space by the Sun’s churning convection
currents in the upper layers of its atmosphere. These ‘coronal mass ejections’ ( CMEs) travel at speeds of up to
11,000,000 kilometre per hour, and the Sun can fire off as many as 20 per