A coronal mass
ejection, or CME, on the sun’s
surface is a frequent occurrence during the current active
solar cycle, Solar Cycle 25. Image
via NASA/ GSFC/ SDO.
Otherwise known as the northern or southern lights, an aurora
is light emitted by upper atmospheric particles as they
interact with energized ones from the magnetosphere.
It’s an awe-inspiring and otherworldly event that those
living at high latitudes can experience often. In Cree and Ojibwe teachings,
the northern lights are ancestral spirits who remain and
communicate from the sky.
To scientists, the aurora is an infinitely complex
amalgamation of ionospheric dynamics, a
manifestation of Earth’s intrinsic connection to the sun. To
industry, it’s a risk factor.
On launch day, a coronal mass ejection – a
large burst of plasma expelled from the sun – struck Earth. It
caused a geomagnetic storm in the atmosphere between around 62
and 310 miles (100 and 500 kilometers) in altitude, the target
range for Starlink.
This event injected an immense amount of electromagnetic
energy straight into Earth’s upper atmosphere. It produced beautiful
auroral displays. But the energy also increased the
density of the air. A higher air density typically isn’t a big
deal for satellites in low-Earth orbit, because it’s already
extremely low at usual operational altitudes (upwards of 248
miles or 400 kilometers).
Starlink satellites
burning up in the atmosphere over Puerto Rico, Feb. 7,
2022.
Surprising solar cycle
The sun undergoes a cycle – an 11-year one, to be exact –
from which its activity increases and decreases periodically.
At the peak of a cycle, we see more sunspots on the solar
surface, more radiation emitted, and more solar flares.
Geomagnetic storms like the one that caused the Starlink
destruction event are a relatively common occurrence,
especially when the sun reaches the peak of its 11-year cycle
of strengthening and weakening activity.
We’re currently four years into Solar Cycle 25, but this one
has already proven surprising. The maximum activity of the
25th cycle was predicted to occur in 2025. But solar activity
has already exceeded the expected maximum. This means we’ve
been seeing more geomagnetic storms, more auroral displays
(and at lower latitudes than usual) and, potentially, more
hazardous conditions for satellites in low-Earth orbit.
Solar activity as the number of
sunspots visible on the solar surface. The number of
sunspots seen is already considerably higher than what is
expected from the solar maximum, two years ahead of
schedule. Image via National Oceanic and
Atmospheric Administration (NOAA).
Space weather — the unseen force of nature
If geomagnetic storms are so common, why don’t they cause
more issues? The reality is that they do,
but the consequences are much less obvious than satellites
burning up in the atmosphere.
When space weather energy enters Earth’s upper atmosphere,
for example, the ionospheric composition changes in addition
to the air getting denser. High-frequency, or “shortwave,”
radio communication depends on a predictable ionosphere to
broadcast long distances.
Geomagnetic storms that affect ionospheric composition can
cause radio blackouts, such as
a disruption in North America
on August 7. Even minor storms can cause the degradation
of radio signals used in military and maritime systems,
aviation communication or ham radio.
Extreme storms can cause radio blackouts lasting hours, and
for an entire side of the globe. Storms that big can also
cause more discernible problems, such as the nine-hour electricity outage
experienced by Hydro-Québec in 1989.
Space weather warning systems
It’s not all doom and disintegrating rockets, however. We can
detect when a solar flare leaves the surface of the sun and
predict roughly when it will affect the Earth, giving
forewarning to certain types of storms and chances to see the aurora.
For many storms however, there is very little or no
predictive capability because it depends on how the Earth’s
magnetic field interacts with the solar wind, which is harder
to see.
As for why SpaceX lost satellites in February 2022 during a
minor geomagnetic storm, that was just a matter of timing. The
loss of the satellites, however, is a stunning reminder of the
power of the universe we live in.