Sun unleashes jaw-dropping filament eruption — but Earth dodges the blast (photo)

I wish they would show those videos in real time. Or at least intermittent time stamp frames for brevity.

It would give a more correct sense of the size, velocity and distance…….. of what we are watching. I believe it to be misleading about the size of the sun and the size of space. And the motion thru space. Those videos are warp speed.

I don’t believe matter can move that fast for that size area. Even though that phase of matter is the quickest.

And if that was real time, please correct me. I am not a scientist.
 
It would take about 8 hours for such a plume to spurt out. You cannot see the motion of a prominence when you view it through an amateur telescope.
This was a whopper, all right. Had it been pointed at Earth the damage could have been historic. There are other factors also. It strongly depends upon the direction of the Earth's magnetic field as compared to the cloud's magnetic field at the time the cloud arrives at Earth. If it is opposite to Earth's it will facilitate the particle's journey down our own field lines, if oriented the same, it will bounce away.
It usually takes about two days to get here, however if another Coronal Mass Ejection, CME swept space clear a day or so earlier, the new one could get here in less than a day.
 
That ejected stripe is about 40-50 earth diameters long. That’s just a quick guess. If it hit us in an incident manor, we could be bombarded for weeks.

No space communications and maybe no grid. If it takes out our grid transformers, it could take years to repair.
 
  • Like
Reactions: Joexo
If we had the means to accurately predict the effects of a particular solar mass ejection, then we could pre-emptively disconnect the vulnerable equipment to protect it.

Yes, that would mean intentionally taking the whole electrical grid down for a short period of time. But, that is better than taking it down for a year - especially without any warning or preplanning.

With pre-planning, and development and deployment of the necessary backup devices and measures, we should be able to "weather" something like the Carrington Event mass ejection. But, we need to determine in advance what devices need to be disconnected/shut down to protect them and what devices can be used during the event without destroying them.

Further, we also need to be able to determine the magnetic orientation of the plasma coming at us to predict whether we need to take the protective actions. That is a problem. Currently, we rely on the satellites that we have always between Earth and the Sun at the L1 LaGrange Point. But, that is not far enough away to give us the amount of lead time we would like to prepare for impact. But, there is no other stable orbit location farther from Earth that is always between us and the Sun. And, it is out of the question that we could launch a probe directly at the Sun from Earth that could travel fast enough to give us more lead time - the solar material is traveling so fast that our probe would not even get to the LaGrange Point before the plasma can get there from the Sun.

So, we need some sort of remote sensing capability to determine the orientation of the magnetic field of the plasma promptly after it is ejected from the Sun. Do we have any ideas about how that could be done?
 

Latest posts

OSZAR »