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Lt Col John (Jack) Christensen
7
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Fascinating stuff, thanks for sharing.
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SFC(P) Larry Nahalea
SFC(P) Larry Nahalea
>1 y
The more we think we know, the more we find out that we really don't know. Mother nature is not timid at all.
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MAJ Bob Miyagishima
MAJ Bob Miyagishima
>1 y
Lt Col John (Jack) Christensen well to be quite honest with you in my area of the US (New Mexico) I wouldn't even know that this event occurred because nothing seem to have happened: watch now as soon as I get off this post, watch my computer Go haywire or something but thank God that we were protected
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MAJ Bob Miyagishima
7
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This sounds scary. The article implies our computers will be damaged if we get hit at a scale of 4 or 5 and that's what they are predicting. Why are we just now hearing about this
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SFC(P) Larry Nahalea
SFC(P) Larry Nahalea
>1 y
Hopefully those guys in the ISS will have time to shelter.
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MSG Signal Support Systems Specialist
MSG (Join to see)
>1 y
The warnings only come one there is a solar event, a flare or a coronal.mass ejection, neither of which are predictable in any practical way. The time for these balls of energy to reach earth is only two days so there isn't much time.

The danger is most severe when approaching the summer solstice when the north pole is most directly in line with the sun. The Earth's magnetic field protects us from most of these events, but the poles are where that protection is weakest. The energy can travel down the magnetic wells at either pole (summer is the greatest hazard because the northern hemisphere is both more populated and more developed) with an effect much like an EMP. It has happened before. Power lines caught fire. Transformers blew. The cost to recover from a major event would be in the trillions and the time it would take would put us back to the mid 1800's overnight.

The good news is that everything has to line up just right and the CME has to be strong enough. The odds are definitely in our favor. (And you'll note that this has already taken place earlier today with no meltdowns.)
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MAJ Bob Miyagishima
MAJ Bob Miyagishima
>1 y
MSG (Join to see) thanks for the detailed explanation and thank God nothing serious happened. In fact I've watched the news today and nothing was even mentioned in the news today.
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MSG Signal Support Systems Specialist
MSG (Join to see)
>1 y
MAJ Bob Miyagishima the good news is that people in lower latitudes will get a treat of seeing the Aurora Borealis and HF radio propagation will be great for several weeks.
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SrA John Monette
4
4
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Oh crap.
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SFC(P) Larry Nahalea
SFC(P) Larry Nahalea
>1 y
I definitely second that brother.
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