159 YEARS AGO THE 'VICTORIAN INTERNET' CAUGHT FIRE.
Can you imagine the damage it would cause today? It would take years, possibly decades, to repair.
Moderator
159 YEARS AGO, A GEOMAGNETIC MEGA-STORM: Picture
this: A billion-ton coronal mass ejection (CME)
slams into Earth's magnetic field. Campers in the
Rocky Mountains wake up in the middle of the night, thinking that
the glow they see is sunrise. No, it's the Northern
Lights. People in Cuba read their morning paper by the
red illumination of aurora borealis. Earth is
peppered by particles so energetic, they alter the
chemistry of polar ice.
Aurora map here: http://spaceweather.com/images2018/01sep18/auroramap.jpg
As the day unfolded, the gathering storm electrified
telegraph lines, shocking technicians and setting
their telegraph papers on fire. The "Victorian
Internet" was knocked offline. Magnetometers around
the world recorded strong disturbances in the
planetary magnetic field for more than a week.
The cause of all this was an
extraordinary solar flare witnessed the day before by
British astronomer Richard Carrington. His sighting
on Sept. 1, 1859, marked the discovery of solar flares and
foreshadowed a new field of study: space weather. According to
a NASA-funded study
by the National Academy of Sciences, if a similar
"Carrington Event" occurred today, it could cause
substantial damage to society's high-tech
infrastructure and require years for complete recovery.
Could it happen again? Almost
certainly. In a paper published just a few months ago, researchers from
the University of Birmingham used Extreme Value Theory to estimate
the average time between "Carrington-like flares." Their best
answer: ~100 years. In other words, we may be overdue for a really big
storm.Read their original research here: https://agupubs.onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/full/10.1002/2017SW001727
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