One year on, NASA scientists are still making huge discoveries about the largest geomagnetic storm to hit Earth in two decades, the Gannon storm. The findings are helping us better understand and prepare for the ways in which the Sun’s activity can affect us.
On May 10, 2024, the first G5 or “severe”
geomagnetic storm in over two decades hit Earth. The event did not cause any
catastrophic damages, but it did produce surprising effects on Earth. The
storm, which has been called the best-documented geomagnetic storm in history,
spread auroras to unusually low latitudes and produced effects spanning from
the ground to near-Earth space. Data captured during this historic event will
be analyzed for years to come, revealing new lessons about the nature of
geomagnetic storms and how best to weather them. Credit: NASA/Joy Ng
One year ago today, representatives
from NASA and about 30 other U.S. government agencies gathered for a special
meeting to simulate and address a threat looming in space. The threat was not
an asteroid or aliens, but our very own life-giving Sun.
The inaugural Space Weather Tabletop Exercise was supposed to be a training event, where
experts could work through the real-time ramifications of a geomagnetic storm,
a global disruption to Earth’s magnetic field. Driven by solar eruptions,
geomagnetic storms can decimate satellites, overload electrical grids, and
expose astronauts to dangerous radiation. Minimizing the impacts of such storms
requires close coordination, and this meeting was their chance to practice.
Then, their simulation turned into
reality.
“The plan was to run through a
hypothetical scenario, finding where our existing processes worked and where
they needed improvement,” said Jamie Favors, director of NASA’s Space Weather
Program at NASA Headquarters in Washington. “But then our hypothetical scenario
was interrupted by a very real one.”
On May 10, 2024, the first G5 or “severe” geomagnetic storm in over two decades hit Earth. The event, named the Gannon storm in memory of leading space weather physicist Jennifer Gannon, did not cause any catastrophic damages. But a year on, key insights from the Gannon storm are helping us understand and prepare for future geomagnetic storms.
NASA’s Solar Dynamics Observatory captured this image
of the Sun on May 7, 2024, in extreme ultraviolet light (at a wavelength of 304
Ångstroms). At center, the active region that instigated the Gannon storm
stretches approximately 17 times the size of Earth. (A scaled image of Earth is
inset for size reference.) In early May 2024, the active region released a chain of powerful solar eruptions, including several coronal mass ejections, or CMEs —
giant clouds of solar particles — that merged to form a superstorm that reached
Earth on May 10. Ahead of the storm, the National Oceanic and Atmospheric
Administration, or NOAA, issued its first severe geomagnetic storm watch in almost two decades.
NASA/Helioviewer
Storm Consequences
The Gannon storm had effects on and
off our planet.
On the ground, some high-voltage lines tripped, transformers overheated, and GPS-guided tractors veered off-course in the Midwestern U.S., further disrupting planting that had already been delayed by heavy rains that spring.
Some modern tractors use GPS to help farmers plant
efficiently and maximize crop yields. During the Gannon storm in May 2024,
however, certain GPS-guided tractor models veered off course or stopped
working, disrupting or delaying planting for many U.S. farmers.
Storyblocks
“Not all farms were affected, but those that were lost on average about
$17,000 per farm,” said Terry Griffin, a professor of Agricultural Economics at
Kansas State University. “It’s not catastrophic, but they'll miss it.”
In the air, the threat of higher
radiation exposure, as well as communication and navigation losses, forced
trans-Atlantic flights to change course.
Trans-Atlantic Flights Rerouted
during Gannon Storm
May 11, 2024 – May 18, 2024
During the storm, Earth’s upper atmospheric layer called the thermosphere heated to unusually high temperatures. At 100 miles altitude, the temperature typically peaks at 1,200 degrees Fahrenheit, but during the storm it surpassed 2,100 degrees Fahrenheit. NASA’s GOLD (Global-scale Observations of the Limb and Disk) mission observed the atmosphere expanding from the heat to create a strong wind that lofted heavy nitrogen particles higher.
The unique swirls in this image of GOLD data, show the
ratio of lighter oxygen to nitrogen — a key atmospheric indicator — that
exhibited a previously unseen structure in Earth's thermosphere.
Evans et al. 2024
In orbit, the expanded atmosphere increased drag on thousands of
satellites. NASA’s ICESat-2 lost altitude and entered safe mode while NASA’s Colorado Inner Radiation Belt Experiment (CIRBE) CubeSat deorbited prematurely five
months after the storm. Others, such as the European Space Agency’s Sentinel mission, required more power to maintain their orbits and perform
maneuvers to avoid collisions with space debris.
The storm also dramatically changed
the structure of an atmospheric layer called the ionosphere. A dense zone of
the ionosphere that normally covers the equator at night dipped toward the
South Pole in a check mark shape, causing a temporary gap near the equator.
The Gannon storm also rocked
Earth’s magnetosphere, the magnetic bubble surrounding the planet. Data from
NASA missions MMS (Magnetospheric Multiscale) and THEMIS-ARTEMIS — short for Time History of Events and
Macroscale Interactions-Acceleration, Reconnection, Turbulence and
Electrodynamics of the Moon’s Interaction with the Sun — saw giant, curling
waves of particles and rolled-up magnetic fields along the edge of the CMEs.
These waves were perfectly sized to periodically dump extra magnetic energy and
mass into the magnetosphere upon impact, creating the largest electrical current seen in the magnetosphere in 20 years.
Incoming energy and particles from the Sun also created two new temporary belts of energetic particles within the magnetosphere. Discovered by CIRBE, these belts formed between the Van Allen radiation belts that permanently surround Earth. The belt’s discovery is important to spacecraft and astronauts that can be imperiled by high-energy electrons and protons in the belts.
The Gannon 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. The discovery of the new belts 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.
NASA/Goddard Space Flight
Center/Kristen Perrin
Unusual Auroras
The storm also ignited auroras around the globe, including places where these
celestial light shows are rare. NASA’s Aurorasaurus project was flooded with more than 6,000
observer reports from over 55 countries and all seven continents.
Photographers helped scientists understand why auroras observed throughout Japan were magenta rather than the typical red. Researchers studied hundreds of photos and found the auroras were surprisingly high — around 600 miles above the ground (200 miles higher than red auroras typically appear).
In Japan, where it’s typical to see red auroras,
numerous skywatchers captured photos of unusual magenta auroras instead. With
the help of hundreds of photos like this one shared via social media,
researchers found the magenta auroras were exceptionally high — around 600
miles above the ground (compared to a typical maximum height of 400 miles for
red auroras, which are usually the highest).
KAGAYA
In a paper published in the journal Scientific Reports, the
research team says the peculiar color likely resulted from a mix of red and
blue auroras, produced by oxygen and nitrogen molecules lofted higher than
usual as the Gannon storm heated and expanded the upper atmosphere.
“It typically needs some special
circumstances, like we saw last May,” co-author Josh Pettit of NASA’s Goddard
Space Flight Center said of Japan’s magenta auroras. “A very unique event
indeed.”
Otherworldly Effects
Impacts of the Sun’s amped-up solar
activity didn’t end at Earth. The solar active region that sparked the Gannon
storm eventually rotated away from our planet and redirected its outbursts
toward Mars.
As energetic particles from the Sun struck the Martian atmosphere, NASA’s MAVEN (Mars Atmosphere and Volatile Evolution) orbiter watched auroras engulf the Red Planet from May 14 to 20.
The purple color in this animated GIF shows auroras
across Mars' nightside as detected by the Imaging Ultraviolet Spectrograph
instrument aboard NASA's MAVEN (Mars Atmosphere and Volatile EvolutioN)
orbiter. The brighter the purple, the more auroras were present. MAVEN took
these images between May 14 and 20, 2024, as energetic particles from a solar
storm were arriving at Mars. The sequence pauses at the end, when the most
energetic particles arrived and overwhelmed the instrument with noise. MAVEN
made the observations as it orbited below Mars, looking up at the nightside of
the planet. (Mars' south pole can be seen on the right, in full sunlight.)
NASA/University of Colorado/LASP
Solar particles overwhelmed the star camera on NASA’s 2001 Mars
Odyssey orbiter
(which uses stars to orient the spacecraft), causing the camera to cut out for
almost an hour.
On the Martian surface, images from the navigation cameras on NASA’s Curiosity rover were freckled with “snow” — streaks and specks caused by charged particles. Meanwhile, Curiosity’s Radiation Assessment Detector recorded the biggest surge of radiation since the rover landed in 2012. If astronauts had been there, they would have received a radiation dose of 8,100 micrograys — equivalent to 30 chest X-rays.
The specks in this image sequence were caused by
charged particles from the Sun hitting one of the navigation cameras aboard
NASA's Curiosity Mars rover on May 20, 2024. The sequence also shows the
effects of a wind gust that happened to occur at the same time on the Martian
surface.
NASA/JPL-Caltech
Still More to Come
The Gannon storm spread auroras to
unusually low latitudes and has been called the best-documented geomagnetic
storm in history. A year on, we have just begun unraveling its story. Data
captured during this historic event will be analyzed for years to come,
revealing new lessons about the nature of geomagnetic storms and how best to
weather them.
By Mara Johnson-Groh, Miles Hatfield, and Vanessa Thomas
NASA’s Goddard Space Flight Center, Greenbelt, Md.
Source: What NASA Is Learning from the Biggest Geomagnetic Storm in 20 Years - NASA Science
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