NASA: Human activities now affecting space

From the “worse than we thought” department and NASA Goddard Space Flight Center comes this:

Space weather events linked to human activity

Our Cold War history is now offering scientists a chance to better understand the complex space system that surrounds us. Space weather — which can include changes in Earth’s magnetic environment — are usually triggered by the sun’s activity, but recently declassified data on high-altitude nuclear explosion tests have provided a new look at the mechanisms that set off perturbations in that magnetic system. Such information can help support NASA’s efforts to protect satellites and astronauts from the natural radiation inherent in space.

From 1958 to 1962, the U.S. and U.S.S.R. ran high-altitude tests with exotic code names like Starfish, Argus and Teak. The tests have long since ended, and the goals at the time were military. Today, however, they can provide crucial information on how humans can affect space. The tests, and other human-induced space weather, are the focus of a comprehensive new study published in Space Science Reviews.

“The tests were a human-generated and extreme example of some of the space weather effects frequently caused by the sun,” said Phil Erickson, assistant director at MIT’s Haystack Observatory, Westford, Massachusetts, and co-author on the paper. “If we understand what happened in the somewhat controlled and extreme event that was caused by one of these man-made events, we can more easily understand the natural variation in the near-space environment.”

By and large, space weather – which affects the region of near-Earth space where astronauts and satellites travel – is typically driven by external factors. The sun sends out millions of high-energy particles, the solar wind, which races out across the solar system before encountering Earth and its magnetosphere, a protective magnetic field surrounding the planet. Most of the charged particles are deflected, but some make their way into near-Earth space and can impact our satellites by damaging onboard electronics and disrupting communications or navigation signals. These particles, along with electromagnetic energy that accompanies them, can also cause auroras, while changes in the magnetic field can induce currents that damage power grids.

The Cold War tests, which detonated explosives at heights from 16 to 250 miles above the surface, mimicked some of these natural effects. Upon detonation, a first blast wave expelled an expanding fireball of plasma, a hot gas of electrically charged particles. This created a geomagnetic disturbance, which distorted Earth’s magnetic field lines and induced an electric field on the surface.

Some of the tests even created artificial radiation belts, akin to the natural Van Allen radiation belts, a layer of charged particles held in place by Earth’s magnetic fields. The artificially trapped charged particles remained in significant numbers for weeks, and in one case, years. These particles, natural and artificial, can affect electronics on high-flying satellites — in fact some failed as a result of the tests.

Although the induced radiation belts were physically similar to Earth’s natural radiation belts, their trapped particles had different energies. By comparing the energies of the particles, it is possible to distinguish the fission-generated particles and those naturally occurring in the Van Allen belts.

Other tests mimicked other natural phenomena we see in space. The Teak test, which took place on Aug. 1, 1958, was notable for the artificial aurora that resulted. The test was conducted over Johnston Island in the Pacific Ocean. On the same day, the Apia Observatory in Western Samoa observed a highly unusual aurora, which are typically only observed in at the poles. The energetic particles released by the test likely followed Earth’s magnetic field lines to the Polynesian island nation, inducing the aurora. Observing how the tests caused aurora, can provide insight into what the natural auroral mechanisms are too.

Later that same year, when the Argus tests were conducted, effects were seen around the world. These tests were conducted at higher altitudes than previous tests, allowing the particles to travel farther around Earth. Sudden geomagnetic storms were observed from Sweden to Arizona and scientists used the observed time of the events to determine the speed at which the particles from the explosion traveled. They observed two high-speed waves: the first travelled at 1,860 miles per second and the second, less than a fourth that speed. Unlike the artificial radiation belts, these geomagnetic effects were short-lived, lasting only seconds.

Atmospheric nuclear testing has long since stopped, and the present space environment remains dominated by natural phenomena. However, considering such historical events allows scientists and engineers to understand the effects of space weather on our infrastructure and technical systems.

Such information adds to a larger body of heliophysics research, which studies our near-Earth space environment in order to better understand the natural causes of space weather. NASA missions such as Magnetospheric Multiscale (MMS), Van Allen Probes and Time History of Events and Macroscale Interactions during Substorms (THEMIS) study Earth’s magnetosphere and the causes of space weather. Other NASA missions, like STEREO, constantly survey the sun to look for activity that could trigger space weather. These missions help inform scientists about the complex system we live in, and how to protect the satellites we utilize for communication and navigation on a daily basis.

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Related:

NASA’s Van Allen Probes Spot Man-Made Barrier Shrouding Earth

Humans have long been shaping Earth’s landscape, but now scientists know that we also can shape our near-space environment with radio communications, which have been found to interact with particles in space.

A certain type of communications — very low frequency, or VLF, radio communications — have been found to interact with particles in space, affecting how and where they move. At times, these interactions can create a barrier around Earth against natural high energy particle radiation in space. These results, part of a comprehensive paper on human-induced space weather, were recently published in Space Science Reviews.

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May 18, 2017 6:36 am

Please send your letters to the EPA in support of my research proposal (a bargain at only $200,000,000) to study and design new foods for astronauts which will dramatically reduce space flatulance, a known hazard that is sure to cause us all to burn to a cinder in the next few decades if not stopped.

PiperPaul
Reply to  andrewpattullo
May 18, 2017 8:41 am

Could be a propellant.

RWturner
May 18, 2017 8:37 am

Just for curiosity sake, I looked up citations of strange auroras in 1958. Looks like they attributed it to solar activity. Just another example of a conclusion being drawn for the sake of a conclusion, when instead a “we don’t know” would have been the correct answer. But that answer scares people, especially intelligent people.
http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1029/JZ067i004p01692/abstract
https://pwg.gsfc.nasa.gov/istp/outreach/events/58/
http://adsabs.harvard.edu/abs/1962JATP…24..975K
The “Great Magnetic Storm of February 11, 1958” whomp whomp

RACookPE1978
Editor
May 18, 2017 9:13 am

Every NASA space shot investigating these aurora (chemical-boosted space shots) is reported in the book about shooting high-altitude rockets up from Poker Flats, Alaska. Very interesting, very sobering history of what NASA can actually do with a limited budget under extreme conditions on the edge of technology.
When the research scientists and engineers and technicians actually WANT to do RESEARCH and not fight political games or build bureaucratic empires in a budget-building scheme for greater Washington power!
Now? “Follow the book, write the budget proposal. Get the CAGW funds from sympathetic bureaucrats and politicians! Print the paper. Write the budget proposal. Get the CAGW funds from sympathetic …. “

Carla
May 18, 2017 10:08 am

VLF waves out to 2.8 earth radii, hello?
WUWT ???
I will defer to Smart Rocks comment..
https://wattsupwiththat.com/2017/05/17/nasa-humans-activities-now-affecting-space/#comment-2505425
“””…So yeah, there’s pretty much a constant, continuous VLF field around the earth, it’s been there since at least the 1960s, and it might have effects on space weather. But I would assume it would be restricted to the surface layer. The ground-hugging ability of VLF is what makes it useful for communication, so I don’t imagine VLF waves getting outside the atmosphere. Of course, I’ve been wrong before, especially when theorizing on subjects I know nothing about………….”””
As reported on spaceweather.com below. (5-18-17)
Related:
NASA’s Van Allen Probes Spot Man-Made Barrier Shrouding Earth
…Co-author Phil Erickson of MIT’s Haystack Observatory explains: “As Van Allen discovered in the 1950s and 1960s, there are two radiation belts surrounding Earth with a ‘slot’ between them. Our research is focused on the the outer radiation belt, which contains electrons with energies of a million or more electron-volts. These ‘killer electrons’ have the potential to damage spacecraft, even causing permanent failures.”
During strong geomagnetic storms, the outer radiation belt expands, causing the killer electrons to approach Earth. But NASA’s Van Allen Probes, a pair of spacecraft sent to explore the radiation belts, found that something was stopping the particles from getting too close.
“The penetration of the outer belt stopped right at the same place as the edge of VLF strong transmissions from humans on the ground,” says Erickson. “These VLF transmissions penetrate seawater, so we use them to communicate with submarines. They also propagate upward along Earth’s magnetic field lines, forming a ‘bubble’ of VLF waves that reaches out to about 2.8 Earth-radii–the same spot where the ultra-relativistic electrons seem to stop.”
http://www.spaceweather.com/images2017/18may17/vlfbubble_strip.jpg
VLF radio waves clear the area of killer electrons “via a wave-particle gyro-resonance,” says Erickson. “Essentially, they are just the right frequency to scatter the particles into our atmosphere where their energy is safely absorbed.”
“Because powerful VLF transmitters have been operating since before the dawn of the Space Age, it is possible that we have never observed the radiation belts in their pristine, unperturbed state,” notes the team, which includes John Foster, a colleague of Erickson at MIT and a key leader of this research, along with Dan Baker at the University of Colorado Boulder….
http://www.spaceweather.com/

jmorpuss
Reply to  Carla
May 20, 2017 3:28 am

Carla ;>)
Hear is Australia’s contribution to atmospheric VLF waves. I read somewhere that under the whole site is a copper mesh ground sheet and the transmission room is made of wood including the nuts and bolts that hold it together.

And this wasn’t the first plane to free fall around Exmouth Western Australia.
http://www.news.com.au/news/a-flash-then-we-plunged/news-story/df29a5e0673298caee0f94995cbd0e26

No Name Guy
May 18, 2017 10:11 am

Interesting information on nuke testing on nuclearweaponsarchive dot org. Discussion of the various high altitude tests, etc.

May 18, 2017 11:51 am

Nearly four years ago on WUWT:
“vukcevic June 21, 2013 at 11:33 am
………….
There is a remote possibility that the starfish experiment reversed PDO
http://www.vukcevic.talktalk.net/Starfish.htm

Reply to  vukcevic
May 18, 2017 12:32 pm

ps. within a short period of time the relevant pdf document was removed from the GSFC’s website (I just checked, not there any longer, may be available elsewhere though) and my website was interrogated by an agency.

mpaul
May 19, 2017 7:10 am

OK, so: (1) we had a period of global warming that started in the late 50s and lasted until ~2000; (2) there’s increasing evidence that the interaction of the solar wind with the Earth’s magnetosphere effects surface temperature; (3) in the late 50s we began nuclear testing that has been shown to alter the Earth’s magnetosphere Surely inquiring minds could see a grant application in this fact pattern, no?

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