Space Weather Secrets 18
keitsi69 writes "Finnish Broadcasting Company (YLE) has a story about space weather: "Intense solar particle emissions hit the earth's ionosphere bringing large electrical fields with them. They can damage or knock-out satellites, corrode oil pipelines and cause electricity transformers to stop working. Hence, the necessity of space weather forecasting, Professor Pulkkinen notes." Pretty interesting. Soon we all will be watching space forecasts..."
Re:uh for heaven's sake (Score:3, Funny)
Space Weather (Score:4, Informative)
Ironically, I think their forcasts are more accurate than our local guys.
=Smidge=
Re:Space Weather (Score:3, Informative)
Re:Space Weather (Score:1)
No irony, our weather depends on space weather, so you could expect that it's harder to predict our weather because it has more things interfering
I was reading about old works on weather forecast (old=1963). Everybody who works on attractors after this year quotes this Lorenz (J. Atm. Sci., 1963)... Cute pictures.
Which leads me to a different point. People often try do describe earth's weather as a strange chaotic attractor, because so many things make it vary and because unprecise measurments may lead to very different results. I wonder if such thing is applyable to space forecasts...
Predictability (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:Predictability (Score:5, Informative)
Aurorae aren't the only things "regular" folk see. Six million people in Quebec lost power [agu.org] because of a solar storm. Commercial and military institutions lose satellites fairly frequently due to solar storms. Most of the people in the US lost pager service [agu.org] for this reason.
These issues are a high priority for NASA, NOAA, and the Air Force. Lots of good data have come from SOHO [nasa.gov], WIND [nasa.gov], and ACE [nasa.gov], but these are either nearing the end of their lives or they are done. STEREO [nasa.gov] should provide the next round of very good data. Just about any spacecraft that measures the solar wind contributes to understanding space weather, and some missions are designed with that as their primary mission. There are also ground-based programs that make very valuable observations. A good page with some space missions can be found here [nasa.gov].
Re:Predictability (Score:1)
Earth weather? They can't even predict exact weather for tomorrow. (mostly sunny with possibility of rain) does such forecast really help us?
Re:Predictability (Score:2)
We also get hit by CMEs that are caused by "backside events," which are flares or other disturbances that erupt behind the limb of the Sun and we didn't see them occur. STEREO is supposed to help there.
One researcher in the field of solar weather forecasting put the maturity level of space weather forecasting 50 years behind [space.com] that of terrestrial weather forecasting. That was the state in 2000 and not much has improved since. The biggest difference is that for Earth weather forecasting we have continuous global weather observations on both the ground and from space. There is only a tiny fraction of coverage for space weather, and as I mentioned in my first post it still isn't clear what kinds of instruments are sufficient.
Good information resources on space weather can be found at the Space Environment Center [noaa.gov] at NOAA's web site. They have a nice education page [noaa.gov] on space weather. For a look into what the space weather field priorities are, one place to start is the Living With A Star [nasa.gov] program page.
BOFH Excuse page? (Score:4, Funny)
Re:BOFH Excuse page? (Score:1)
Used that one on a customer with a 100' unshielded cable hanging between two buildings..
It was true, too.. During the Summer of 2000, I think, big solar storm
My favorite is still fat electrons getting stuck in the pipes.
Or, 'call microsoft' *grin*
josh
Re:Slashdot effect? (Score:1)
into english:
FBC Internet Publishing System: Database Error
and the rest of the error you can read, right?
you tried to be funny?
Re:Slashdot effect? (Score:1)
Ah. (Score:2, Funny)
Re:Ah. (Score:1)
Tim
Re:Ah. (Score:1)