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Geomagnetically Induced Currents

All articles tagged with #geomagnetically induced currents

Earth as Battery: The 1859 Carrington Event Sparks Telegraph Chaos
space-weather25 days ago

Earth as Battery: The 1859 Carrington Event Sparks Telegraph Chaos

The 1859 Carrington solar storm unleashed a fast coronal mass ejection that slammed Earth’s magnetosphere, turning hundreds of miles of telegraph wires into a giant generator; operators unplugged their batteries and still transmitted as sparks flew and lines smoked, with auroras visible far from the poles. The event illustrated how geomagnetically induced currents ride along ground conductors, a risk echoed in later outages like the 1989 Quebec blackout and a present-day grid whose transformers and infrastructure would face severe disruption—yet warnings from space weather monitoring can provide precious minutes to protect vulnerable equipment.

Auroras Warn of Potential Infrastructure Threat from Solar Storms
science-and-technology2 years ago

Auroras Warn of Potential Infrastructure Threat from Solar Storms

Research reveals that the angle of interplanetary shocks against Earth's magnetic field significantly impacts the severity of geomagnetically induced currents, which can damage critical infrastructure like power grids and pipelines. Direct shocks induce stronger currents, posing greater risks. Forecasting these shocks could help mitigate potential damage.

Solar Storms Threaten Railway Safety: Experts Sound Alarm
science-and-technology2 years ago

Solar Storms Threaten Railway Safety: Experts Sound Alarm

Scientists have warned that solar storms, which are blasts of energy from the Sun, could potentially cause train accidents by disrupting rail signals. Researchers modeled how geomagnetically induced currents from solar storms could affect rail signaling systems and found that space weather events capable of triggering faults in these systems are expected in the UK every few decades. The study suggests that solar storms could flip rail signals in either direction, turning a red signal green or a green signal red, posing significant safety risks. This highlights the need to take space weather as a serious natural hazard and plan for its potential impacts on critical infrastructure.