Earth and space are about to come into contact in a way that's new
to human history. To make preparations, authorities in Washington DC
are holding a meeting: The Space Weather Enterprise Forum at the
National Press Club on June 8th.
Richard Fisher, head of NASA's Heliophysics Division, explains what
it's all about:
"The sun is waking up from a deep slumber, and in the next few years
we expect to see much higher levels of solar activity. At the same
time, our technological society has developed an unprecedented
sensitivity to solar storms. The intersection of these two issues is
what we're getting together to discuss."
The National Academy of Sciences framed the problem two years ago in
a landmark report entitled "Severe Space Weather Events—Societal and
Economic Impacts." It noted how people of the 21st-century rely on
high-tech systems for the basics of daily life. Smart power grids,
GPS navigation, air travel, financial services and emergency radio
communications can all be knocked out by intense solar activity. A
century-class solar storm, the Academy warned, could cause twenty
times more economic damage than Hurricane Katrina.As we approach
the next peak of solar activity expected in 2013, our nation faces
multiplying uncertainties from increasing reliance on space
weather-affected technologies for communication, navigation,
security, and other activities, many of which underpin our national
infrastructure and economy.
Visit the NASA site...
"The Won" said that he inherited the problem from the Bush
administration, but that he had been on it since day one. He has
appointed a Space Weather Czar, a Harvard Law School classmate, to
lead a team of Liberal Arts professors in studying possible
solutions to the problem. Their report is due to be completed by
June, 2015.

"Northern Lights" over a
Norwegian fjord
06/18/10 UPDATE
NASA: Cosmic 'superstorm' more crippling than 20
Katrinas
Solar flare forecast renews concern over power grids,
communications
By Bob Unruh
© 2010 WorldNetDaily
A new government forecast warns a coming possible solar storm could
eliminate – at least temporarily across large swaths of the world –
power grids, air travel and communications, including those
operating financial services and emergency systems, as well as GPS
functions and even cell phones.
"The sun is waking up from a deep slumber, and in the next few years
we expect to see much higher levels of solar activity," said Richard
Fisher, head of NASA's Heliophysics Division, in the report released
just days ago.
"At the same time, our technological society has developed an
unprecedented sensitivity to solar storms," he said.
WND first reported last year that NASA held high levels of concern
over solar flare activity that appeared to be running in cycles. The
new forecast suggests the solar storm could be at its peak activity
in 2012 or 2013.
At that time, NASA forecast the possibility of a rerun of the May
1921 "superstorm" or the so-called Carrington event of 1859, which
was described by Space.com as "the most powerful onslaught of solar
energy in recorded history."
The new NASA report cited a National Academy of Sciences explanation
from two years ago – "Severe Space Weather Events – Societal and
Economic Impacts" – that documented how 21st-century civilization
relies on high-tech systems for the basics of life.
Without power grids, there is no fuel pumped from underground tanks
into vehicles. Without cell towers, communications could be
stricken. Without servers, banking systems could revert to paper
receipts. Even the supply of food could be disrupted should delivery
systems be unable to track trains, trucks and shipments.
"A century-class solar storm, the Academy warned, could cause 20
times more economic damage than Hurricane Katrina," the new NASA
warning stated.
As support for its concerns, NASA said one of the most massive sun
flare eruptions in years was observed April 19, although the Earth
was not in the line of fire this time.
NASA reports said astronomers have seen eruptions like this before
but rarely so large.
So important is the issue that officials recently held a Space
Weather Enterprise Forum in Washington to begin dialogue over the
potential problem.
NASA's report said much damage can be minimized if a storm forecast
is accurate.
"Putting satellites in 'safe mode' and disconnecting transformers
can protect these assets from damaging electrical surges," the
report said.
Thomas Bogdan, director of the Space Weather Prediction Center of
the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration in Boulder,
Colo., said rapid steps are being made, but it still is not an
advanced science.
"Space weather forecasting is still in its infancy," he said.
Three NASA projects are expected to contribute to the information
that will be available about the coming situation, including the
pair of Solar Terrestrial Relations Observatory units stationed on
opposite sides of the globe.
The Solar Dynamics Observatory also will help, because the new
project, launched in February, can photograph solar active regions
with much higher resolution than ever before.
Also involved will be Advanced Composition Explorer, in use since
1997, which monitors solar wind activity.
"I believe we're on the threshold of a new era in which space
weather can be as influential in our daily lives as ordinary
terrestrial weather," Fisher said. "We take this very seriously
indeed."
Among the subjects considered at the recent Washington conference
were how to build resilience across society, especially in critical
infrastructure protection and support.
According to a report in the Daily Galaxy, the flares that appear to
move in 22-year cycles could cause power grids to overheat and
navigational devices and satellites to stop.
It's estimated that during solar storms, temperatures on the sun
reach 10,000 degrees Fahrenheit.
"We know it is coming but we don't know how bad it is going to be,"
Fisher told The Daily Telegraph. "It will disrupt communication
devices such as satellites and car navigations, air travel, the
banking system, our computers, everything that is electronic. It
will cause major problems for the world. Large areas will be without
electricity power and to repair that damage will be hard as that
takes time.
"Systems will just not work," he warned. "The flares change the
magnetic field on the earth that is rapid and like a lightning bolt.
That is the solar effect."
Tom Chivers, the Telegraph's strategic events editor, said his
sources agreed that there should be concern.
He reported speaking to Ruth Bamford, a plasma physicist at the
Rutherford-Appleton Lab, who said, "The sun has been particularly
quiet for the last few years in a protracted solar minimum. It has
just woken up, as it were, and started its usual 11-year cycle a bit
later than most."
He noted documentation that the 1859 solar storm "burned out
telegraph wires across Europe and the United States."
"It's a real thing, and we should be concerned. But preventive
measures can be taken – satellites can be sent offline during big
flares, power grids and communication networks can be shielded
against electromagnetic radiation and so on," Chivers wrote.
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