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Richard Fisher, NASA:
Heliophysics Research Spacecraft Keeps a Wary Eye on Space Weather
June 8, 2010
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.
Many technologies of
the 21st century are vulnerable to solar storms
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.
Much of the damage can be mitigated if managers know a storm is coming.
Putting satellites in 'safe mode' and disconnecting transformers can
protect these assets from damaging electrical surges. Preventative
action, however, requires accurate forecasting—a job that has been
assigned to NOAA.
"Space weather forecasting is still in its infancy, but we're making
rapid progress," says Thomas Bogdan, director of NOAA's Space Weather
Prediction Center in Boulder, Colorado.
Bogdan sees the collaboration between NASA and NOAA as key. "NASA's
fleet of heliophysics research spacecraft provides us with
up-to-the-minute information about what's happening on the sun. They are
an important complement to our own GOES and POES satellites, which focus
more on the near-Earth environment."

Among dozens of NASA spacecraft, he
notes three of special significance: STEREO, SDO and ACE.
STEREO (Solar Terrestrial Relations Observatory) is a pair of spacecraft
stationed on opposite sides of the sun with a combined view of 90% of
the stellar surface. In the past, active sunspots could hide out on the
sun's farside, invisible from Earth, and then suddenly emerge over the
limb spitting flares and CMEs. STEREO makes such surprise attacks
impossible.
SDO (the Solar Dynamics Observatory) is the newest addition to NASA's
fleet. Just launched in February, it is able to photograph solar active
regions with unprecedented spectral, temporal and spatial resolution.
Researchers can now study eruptions in exquisite detail, raising hopes
that they will learn how flares work and how to predict them. SDO also
monitors the sun's extreme UV output, which controls the response of
Earth's atmosphere to solar variability.
Bogdan's favorite NASA satellite, however, is an old one: the Advanced
Composition Explorer (ACE) launched in 1997. "Where would we be without
it?" he wonders. ACE is a solar wind monitor. It sits upstream between
the sun and Earth, detecting solar wind gusts, billion-ton CMEs, and
radiation storms as much as 30 minutes before they hit our planet.
"ACE is our best early warning system," says Bogdan. "It allows us to
notify utility and satellite operators when a storm is about to hit.”
NASA
spacecraft were not originally intended for operational forecasting—"but
it turns out that our data have practical economic and civil uses,"
notes Fisher. "This is a good example of space science supporting modern
society."
2010 marks the 4th year in a row that policymakers, researchers,
legislators and reporters have gathered in Washington DC to share ideas
about space weather. This year, forum organizers plan to sharpen the
focus on critical infrastructure protection. The ultimate goal is to
improve the nation’s ability to prepare, mitigate, and respond to
potentially devastating space weather events.
"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 concludes. "We take this very seriously indeed." |