Friday, 24 May 2013
masthead+quote+image
Advanced search

Cloudy, with a chance of apocalypse

If the skies over Northern England and Scotland clear over the next couple of nights, readers lucky enough to live there might get the rare opportunity of seeing the shimmering curtain of the Aurora Borealis over their homes. That’s because, on Valentine’s Day, an enormous tongue of plasma, accompanied by a bubble of magnetic field, erupted from the surface of the sun and started hurtling out into the solar system, resulting in a deluge of charged particles that’s currently hitting the Earth’s protective magnetic field.

Solar astronomers call this an X-class flare — one of the more severe variety — and it’s something that might well happen more often as the sun begins to enter a more active phase.

Solar weather being as unpredictable as the British kind, it’s a sheer coincidence that this happened just as I was writing our next issue’s cover feature, which happens to be about the impact that space weather has on technology on Earth, and what can be done to protect it. I had no idea this was going to happen a month ago, when I started working on it.

On the one hand, this gives my feature a welcome bit of topicality. On the other, it means that a chunk of my carefully-gathered research is now all over the newspapers and on every news broadcast. There goes my element of surprise.

It’s been interesting to see some of the responses to the news. ’Dear news service,’ one well-known science fiction author was seen to grumble on Twitter yesterday, ’you say not to worry about the massive coronal ejection from the Sun and then you call it THE X-FLARE?’

Meanwhile, the most common technological side-effect that’s been mentioned is that your sat-nav might stop working. This is very true, so it might be an idea to break out that prime piece of dead-tree technology, the map. But what hasn’t been mentioned so much is that it isn’t the thing in your car that might not be working. It’s the satellites. And they do a lot more than just telling drivers which exit of the motorway they should be aiming for.

And this is where we get to the crux of the space weather issue. The sheer magnitude of the sun’s activity — what it’s capable of, and how much power it actually wields — is fairly alarming. But where it gets really scary is how it shows up just how dependent our lifestyles have become on technology that was never designed to be linked together, and what might happen if circumstances utterly beyond our control and impossible to predict start to affect those systems.

You’ll be able to read a lot more about this — and, you’ll be relieved to hear, the efforts being made to prevent the apocalyptic breakdown of technology-driven society — a week on Monday, when our next issue is published. In the meantime, hope for clear skies and enjoy the cosmic show. And try not to be alarmed.

Readers' comments (7)

  • I think the key point here is just how vulnerable our technological society may now be to this solar activity. There's nothing new in the physics - I recall reading articles years back about severe solar disruption to London's telephone system back in the 19th C. Time, perhaps, to buy an ordinary road atlas and turn my living room into a Faraday Cage!!??

    Unsuitable or offensive? Report this comment

  • Mr. Gray has a point but why the front room? Ground the body of our cars (dragging a copper strap on the ground) and save our smart phones in the trunk. Makes for safer drivers (no texting while driving) and protects the "short" hairs on our heads! Great story thanks for the tips..

    Unsuitable or offensive? Report this comment

  • Maybe If we all focus our thoughts we can learn to control the Sun's energy and the Aurora Borealis. Failing that perhaps we can simulate the northern lights but still control them with our brainwaves like this product " http://www.sniffinfo.com/BrainwaveActivatedLumiaEbook/index.htm "

    Unsuitable or offensive? Report this comment

  • You do not need to ground your car to turn it into a Faraday Cage, but you would need to ensure that you had a achieved a continuous metal screen round you. This would require the windows to be covered by a metal film or, at least, a fine wire mesh that was bonded to the body of the car. Another advantage of the heater elements in my car's front and rear windows (even though they will not achieve a complete screen).

    Unsuitable or offensive? Report this comment

  • None of which would do any good if the satellites were knocked out.

  • Slide Rule in hand, I am prepared. Are you?

    Unsuitable or offensive? Report this comment

  • I don't think the satellites can be protected
    of being destroyed.Down the earth is not
    the issue to protect our selves from eventual electric shock,but from enormous
    radiation.So far the Earth's magnetic field
    does it well.

    Unsuitable or offensive? Report this comment

  • What do they mean when they say "the sun will enter into a more active phase". Does this mean we're going to see a permanent (or at least long-term) increase in flares?

    Unsuitable or offensive? Report this comment

  • The sun's activity varies on an 11-year cycle. Sunspots will become more numerous up to a maximum in 2013.

Have your say

Mandatory
Mandatory
Mandatory
Mandatory

Related images

My saved stories (Empty)

You have no saved stories

Save this article

Digital Edition

The Engineer May Digital Edition

Poll

Digital healthcare gives clinicians the ability to monitor patients in their homes, rather than in hospital. Will this create problems or opportunities?

Previous Poll

Forward-looking flying car specialist Terrafugia has unveiled a new autopilot-equipped STOVL concept which it says could be on sale in 8-12 years. But will the science-fiction staple of the flying car ever take off?

Read and comment on the results here