
Carrington Event
On this day in 1859 (and on the day before) one of the largest geomagnetic solar storms ever recorded struck Earth. The Aurora Borealis was seen as far south as the Caribbean. Telegraph systems all over Europe and North America failed. In the Pacific Northwest, the aurora was so bright that people could read a newspaper at night by its light.
According to calculations by insurers Lloyd's of London and risk assessor AER, if a storm of the same magnitude struck the US now, it would cause up to $2.6 trillion worth of damage. The storm is known as the Carrington event after the British astronomer, Richard Carrington, who recorded the storm's genesis as a sunspot on 28 August.
Full story:
http://science.nasa.gov/science-news/science-at-nasa/2008/06may_carringtonflare/
Animation: Coronal mass ejection on February 27, 2011 via SDO
#nasa #universe #solarflare #Carringtonevent #SDO
This is one of the big fears I have for us who live in the civilized world. We are as inadequately prepared for it as asteroid or comet impact. Granted the fallout won't be as instantaneously catastrophic... the ripple effects will be harsh to a world that relies too heavily on electronics to function.
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