ComfortableCarrot631 t1_ixkyho4 wrote
As a physicist, in my faculty we discussed that once and we came to the conclusion that the consequences of the impact of a solar flare would be mitigated by 80% (aprox) if certain measures are taken.
There is a margin of several hours between the detection of a solar flame until it reaches the Earth; if in that time the whole humanity turned off the internet servers and all the power generators, most of the electronics could be saved. But of course, that implies a fairly large global coordination... This looks imposible because from the moment the solar flame is detected until that information reaches the public, it may be too late...
As far as I know, there are several countries that have this problem very into account and companies like Google know what they must do to avoid the destruction of their technology
StaleCanole t1_ixlv37t wrote
A solar flare wouldn’t hit the whole globe though - only half if it, if that
NirogenCube t1_ixnpde2 wrote
It's not the actual solar flare you worrie about. It's the tail and whipping effect of the magnetosphere and ionosphere. A large enough solar flare would cause these two two parts of earths defense mechanism to become incredibly unstable and thin. Not to mention solar forcing and the ionized particals to enter and exit the earths ground.
[deleted] t1_ixow2ag wrote
[removed]
StaleCanole t1_ixow7bj wrote
Well, shit. None of that sounds at all good
NirogenCube t1_ixox5wh wrote
I think the greater issue at hand is the rapidly weakening of earths magnetism and magnetic feild. Not to mention the fact we are in the middle of a geomagnetic excursion. The last time this happened was the laschamp event which is argued to be the event that killed Neanderthals.
grundar t1_ixpfhvg wrote
> The last time this happened was the laschamp event
Per this paper the last time there was a validated geomagnetic excursion was Mono Lake, 8,000 years after Laschamp.
> which is argued to be the event that killed Neanderthals.
Not really an "event", as it lasted 1,000 years, but there is indeed one paper which argues this. Comments published on that paper (essentially mini-papers of their own) indicate that that is a fairly controversial claim.
However, that may not be a near-term concern, as the earth's magnetic field has weakened only 10% over the last 180 years, and is apparently not likely to flip any time soon.
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