Technology
Earth braces for ‘spectacular’ solar storms and flares as ‘unusually strong’ sunspots smash Nasa predictions
THE SUNSPOT count is higher than experts originally thought, fueling concerns over upcoming extreme solar activity.
The number of sunspots on our Sun has surpassed predictions made by Nasa, NOAA, and the International Space Environmental Service (ISES).
The sun has more active sunspots than experts originally thought
NOAA SWPCGraph showing experts’ predictions for the number of sunspots (red) vs. the actual figure.[/caption]
Sunspots refer to visible dark areas in the Sun’s photosphere as a result of “intense magnetic flux pushing up from further within the solar interior,” the NOAA explained.
Scientists use the known sunspot count to assess our Sun’s solar activity in 11-year cycles.
Each cycle consists of peaks and troughs known as ‘solar maximum’ and ‘solar minimum,’ respectively.
The Sun’s current cycle of solar activity should be mild, however, new data shows that it has been more prominent than experts knew since September 2020.
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This could mean that the Sun is gearing up for an “unusually strong” activity cycle, according to Science Alert.
That’s because the strong magnetic fields that cause sunspots also host and fuel solar flares and coronal mass ejections (CMEs).
A ‘solar flare’ is a term used by astronomers to describe eruptions of electromagnetic radiation that happen in the Sun’s atmosphere.
This intense burst of radiation causes a bright solar flash that may be visible for minutes or even hours on Earth.
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CMEs, which often occur at the same time as a solar flare, happen when accelerated charged particles (mainly electrons) collide with the plasma medium.
This collision then pushes matter away from the Sun’s atmosphere and out into space.
At present, the Sun has 52 sunspots that could trigger these events, according to Space Weather Live.
However, as we’re not due for a solar maximum until sometime around July 2025, that figure could grow.
While solar flares cannot travel far enough to hurt humans here on Earth, the electromagnetic radiation and energetic particles can “temporarily alter the upper atmosphere creating disruptions with signal transmission from, say, a GPS satellite,” Nasa explained.
Similarly, a CME could “induce electric fluctuations at ground level that could blow out transformers in power grids,” the space agency added.
In addition to technology blackouts and power grid malfunctions, the two solar events may also cause spectacular auroras.
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Still, monitoring solar cycles is a tricky business, and experts don’t have it down to an exact science.
“Scientists have struggled to predict both the length and the strength of sunspot cycles because we lack a fundamental understanding of the mechanism that drives the cycle,” solar physicist Scott McIntosh of the US National Center for Atmospheric Research said in 2020, per Science Alert.
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