Reproduced from Yahoo News:

Will the Earth blackout in 2013?
By Piyali Dasgupta – June 9th, 2010
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If you’ve had your fill of apocalyptic scenarios, earthquakes, volcanoes and 
global warming, here comes a new threat which may wipe out the world in 2013.
Imagine a scene from any of Hollywood’s disaster films. An eerie scene where 
mobile phones go on the blink, GPS is knocked out, TVs go blank and the world 
is plunged into chaos.
Looks like disaster flicks aren’t too removed from reality since all this could 
well be the potential result of a gigantic solar storm, according to a new 
report by NASA. The report, a warning, says Earth and space are coming together 
in a way that’s new to human history.
A solar storm, which is essentially violent eruptions in the sun, can eject 
destructive radiation and charged particles into space.  These are closely 
connected to magnetic fields – which are hazardous for satellites and space 
stations.
There are reports of a geomagnetic storm sparked by a huge solar flare that 
swept over the Earth in 1859. Telegraph wires shorted out and set houses on 
fire. A brilliant aurora was seen in Hawaii—so bright that  “people could read 
newspapers by [its] red and green glow.” Scientists predict  that in May 2013, 
the sun’s solar cycle will peak at about the same level as in 1859. (This 
content courtesy a post onGawker.com)
High-tech systems are critical for life as we know it today. Everything that we 
depend on and take for granted – air travel, GPS navigation, banking services 
(even a credit card transaction uses a satellite) and emergency radio 
communications – can all be knocked out by intense solar activity.
To get an idea of scale, a massive solar storm could result in 20 times more 
damage than the devastation caused by Hurricane Katrina which hit south-eastern 
US in August 2005. The storm killed 1,800 people and caused damages worth $81 
billion.
Some good news is that some of the damage and destruction can be avoided with 
warning of an impending solar storm. There is technology to put satellites in 
‘safe mode’ and disconnect transformers to protect them from destructive 
electrical surges.
The task of accurately forecasting a solar storm lies with the National Oceanic 
and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) of the US. “Space weather forecasting is 
still in its infancy, but we’re making rapid progress,” said Thomas Bogdan, 
director of NOAA’s Space Weather Prediction Center in Colorado.
The key for Bogdan lies in NASA and NOAA collaborating. “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.”
Says Bogdon, “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.”
So far, we’ve been lucky to escape any big solar storms.  I guess we could send 
Bruce Willis (a la Armageddon) to save us from the Sun in true Hollywood style. 
But then I would rather wait for NASA and NOAA to save us from space weather.
Images: A hyperactive sun


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