Like a tornado siren for life-threatening storms in America’s heartland, a new computer model that combines artificial intelligence (AI) and NASA satellite data could sound the alarm for dangerous space weather.
The model uses AI to analyze spacecraft
measurements of the solar wind (an unrelenting stream of material
from the Sun) and predict where an impending solar storm will strike, anywhere
on Earth, with 30 minutes of advance warning. This could provide just enough
time to prepare for these storms and prevent severe impacts on power grids and
other critical infrastructure.
NASA's Solar Dynamics Observatory captured this image of a solar flare on Oct. 2, 2014. The solar flare is the bright flash of light at top. A burst of solar material erupting out into space can be seen just to the right of it. Credits: NASA/SDO
The Sun constantly sheds solar material
into space – both in a steady flow known as the “solar wind,” and in shorter,
more energetic bursts from solar eruptions. When this solar material strikes
Earth’s magnetic environment (its “magnetosphere”), it sometimes creates
so-called geomagnetic storms. The impacts of these magnetic storms can range
from mild to extreme, but in a world increasingly dependent on technology,
their effects are growing ever more disruptive.
This movie, captured by NASA’s Solar and Heliospheric Observatory (SOHO), shows two eruptions from the Sun called coronal mass ejections, which blasted charged particles into space on Oct. 28 and 29, 2003. Some of these high-energy particles hit SOHO’s camera, creating what looks like snow. These blasts were part of a string of solar storms around Halloween of that year, which triggered a blackout in Sweden and caused disruptions to communications, aircraft, and spacecraft (including SOHO). In SOHO’s view, a disk blocks direct light from the Sun so that fainter features near it can be seen, while the white circle represents the location and size of the Sun. Credits: NASA/ESA
For example, a
destructive solar storm
in 1989 caused
electrical blackouts across Quebec for 12 hours, plunging millions of Canadians
into the dark and closing schools and businesses. The most intense solar storm
on record, the Carrington
Event in 1859,
sparked fires at telegraph stations and prevented messages from being sent. If
the Carrington Event happened today, it would have even more severe impacts,
such as widespread electrical disruptions, persistent blackouts, and
interruptions to global communications. Such technological chaos could cripple
economies and endanger the safety and livelihoods of people worldwide.
In addition, the risk of geomagnetic
storms and devastating effects on our society is presently increasing as we
approach the next “solar maximum” – a peak in the Sun’s 11-year activity cycle – which is expected to arrive sometime in 2025.
To help prepare, an international team of
researchers at the Frontier Development Lab – a public-private partnership that
includes NASA, the U.S. Geological Survey, and the U.S. Department of Energy –
have been using artificial intelligence (AI) to look for connections between
the solar wind and geomagnetic disruptions, or perturbations, that cause havoc
on our technology. The researchers applied an AI method called “deep learning,”
which trains computers to recognize patterns based on previous examples. They
used this type of AI to identify relationships between solar wind measurements
from heliophysics missions (including ACE, Wind, IMP-8,
and Geotail) and geomagnetic perturbations observed
at ground stations across the planet.
From this, they developed a computer model
called DAGGER (formally, Deep Learning Geomagnetic Perturbation) that can
quickly and accurately predict geomagnetic disturbances worldwide, 30 minutes
before they occur. According to the team, the model can produce predictions in
less than a second, and the predictions update every minute.
DAGGER’s developers compared the model’s predictions to measurements made during solar storms in August 2011 and March 2015. At the top, colored dots show measurements made during the 2011 storm. Colors indicate the intensity of geomagnetic perturbations that can induce currents in electric grids, with orange and red indicating the strongest effects. DAGGER’s 30-minute forecast for that same time (bottom) shows the most intense perturbations in approximately the same locations around Earth’s north pole. Credits: V. Upendran et al.
The DAGGER team
tested the model against two geomagnetic storms that happened in August 2011
and March 2015. In each case, DAGGER was able to quickly and accurately
forecast the storm’s impacts around the world.
Previous prediction models have used AI to produce local geomagnetic forecasts
for specific locations on Earth. Other models that didn’t use AI have provided
global predictions that weren’t very timely. DAGGER is the first one to combine
the swift analysis of AI with real measurements from space and across Earth to
generate frequently updated predictions that are both prompt and precise for
sites worldwide.
“With this AI, it is now possible to make
rapid and accurate global predictions and inform decisions in the event of a
solar storm, thereby minimizing – or even preventing – devastation to modern
society,” said Vishal Upendran of the Inter-University Center for Astronomy and
Astrophysics in India, who is the lead author of a paper about the DAGGER model published in the journal Space Weather.
The computer code in the DAGGER model is
open source, and according to Upendran, it could be adopted, with help, by
power grid operators, satellite controllers, telecommunications companies, and
others to apply the predictions for their specific needs. Such warnings could
give them time to take action to protect their assets and infrastructure from
an impending solar storm, such as temporarily taking sensitive systems offline
or moving satellites to different orbits to minimize damage.
With models like DAGGER, there could one day be solar storm sirens that sound an alarm in power stations and satellite control centers around the world, just as tornado sirens wail in advance of threatening terrestrial weather in towns and cities across America.
by Vanessa
Thomas
NASA’s Goddard Space Flight Center, Greenbelt, Md.
Source: NASA-enabled AI Predictions May Give Time to Prepare for Solar Storms | NASA
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