Key Points
- The May 2024 solar storm
created two new temporary belts of high-energy particles surrounding
Earth.
- Such belts have been seen
before, but the new ones were particularly long lasting, especially the
new proton belt.
- The findings are
particularly important for spacecraft launching into geostationary orbits,
which can be damaged as they traverse the dangerous belts.
The largest solar storm in two
decades hit Earth in May 2024. For several days, wave after wave of high-energy
charged particles from the Sun rocked the planet. Brilliant auroras engulfed
the skies, and some GPS communications were temporarily disrupted.
With the help of a serendipitously
resurrected small NASA satellite, scientists have discovered that this storm
also created two new temporary belts of energetic particles encircling Earth.
The findings are important to understanding how future solar storms could
impact our technology.
The new belts formed between two
others that permanently surround Earth called the Van Allen Belts. Shaped like
concentric rings high above Earth’s equator, these permanent belts are composed
of a mix of high-energy electrons and protons that are trapped in place by
Earth’s magnetic field. The energetic particles in these belts can damage
spacecraft and imperil astronauts who pass through them, so understanding their
dynamics is key to safe spaceflight.
The May 2024 solar storm created two extra radiation
belts, sandwiched between the two permanent Van Allen Belts. One of the new
belts, shown in purple, included a population of protons, giving it a unique
composition that hadn’t been seen before.
NASA/Goddard Space Flight
Center/Kristen Perrin
The discovery of the new belts, made possible by NASA’s Colorado Inner
Radiation Belt Experiment (CIRBE) satellite and published Feb. 6, 2025, in
the Journal of Geophysical Research: Space Physics, is particularly important for protecting spacecraft
launching into geostationary orbits, since they travel through the Van Allen
Belts several times before reaching their final orbit.
New Belts Amaze Scientists
Temporary belts have been detected
in the aftermath of large solar storms before. But while previous belts have
been composed mostly of electrons, the innermost of the two new belts also
included energetic protons. This unique composition is likely due to the
strength and composition of the solar storm.
“When we compared the data from
before and after the storm, I said, ‘Wow, this is something really new,’” said
the paper’s lead author Xinlin Li, a professor at the Laboratory for
Atmospheric and Space Physics (LASP) and Department of Aerospace Engineering
Sciences at the University of Colorado Boulder. “This is really
stunning.”
The new belts also seem to have
lasted much longer than previous belts. Whereas previous temporary belts lasted
around four weeks, the new belt composed primary of electrons lasted more than
three months. The other belt, that also includes protons, has lasted much
longer than the electron belt because it is in a more stable region and is less
prone to the physical processes that can knock the particles out of orbit. It
is likely still there today.
“These are really high-energy
electrons and protons that have found their way into Earth’s inner magnetic
environment,” said David Sibeck, former mission scientist for NASA’s Van
Allen Probes and research scientist at NASA’s Goddard Space Flight Center in
Greenbelt, Maryland, who was not involved with the new study. “Some might stay
in this place for a very long time.”
How long such belts stick around
depends on passing solar storms. Large storms can provide the energy to knock
particles in these belts out of their orbits and send them spiraling off into
space or down to Earth. One such storm at the end of June significantly
decreased the size of the new electron belt and another in August nearly erased
the remainder of that electron belt, though a small population of high-energy
electrons endured.
CubeSat Fortuitously Comes Back to
Life to Make the Discovery
The new discovery was made by
NASA’s CIRBE satellite, a CubeSat about the size of a shoebox that circled the
planet’s magnetic poles in a low Earth orbit from April 2023 to October 2024.
CIRBE housed an instrument called the Relativistic Electron Proton Telescope
integrated little experiment-2 (REPTile-2) — a miniaturized and upgraded
version of an instrument that flew aboard NASA’s Van Allen Probes, which made the first discovery of a temporary electron belt in 2013.
The CIRBE CubeSat in the laboratory before launch.
CIRBE was designed and built by LASP at the University of Colorado Boulder.
Xinlin Li/LASP/CU Boulder
After a year in space, the CubeSat experienced an anomaly and unexpectedly
went quiet on April 15, 2024. The scientists were disappointed to miss
the solar storm in May but were able to rely on other spacecraft to provide some preliminary
data on the electron belt. Luckily, on June 15, the spacecraft sprang back to
life and resumed taking measurements. The data provided high-resolution
information that couldn’t be gleaned by any other instrument and allowed the
scientists to understand the magnitude of the new belts.
“Once we resumed measurements, we
were able to see the new electron belt, which wasn’t visible in the data from
other spacecraft,” Li said.
Having the CubeSat in orbit to
measure the effect of the solar storm has been bittersweet, Li said. While it
provided the opportunity to measure the effects of such a large event, the
storm also increased atmospheric drag on the CubeSat, which caused its orbit to
decrease prematurely. As a result, the CubeSat deorbited in October 2024.
However, the spacecraft’s data makes it all worth it.
“We are very proud that our very
small CubeSat made such a discovery,” Li said.
CIRBE was designed and built by LASP at the University of Colorado Boulder and was launched through NASA’s CubeSat Launch Initiative (CSLI). The mission is sponsored by NASA’s Heliophysics Flight Opportunities for Research & Technology (H-FORT) program.
By Mara
Johnson-Groh
NASA’s
Goddard Space Flight Center, Greenbelt, Md.
Source: NASA CubeSat Finds New Radiation Belts After May 2024 Solar Storm - NASA Science


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