Solar flare: only 7% short of disaster
The Laboratory of Solar Astronomy of the IKI RAS recorded an M9.3 level flare the day before — a record for the last month and a half. It was only 7% short of the maximum X-class. The event occurred exactly in the center of the disk, which means that plasma could be heading straight for Earth. However, scientists do not yet see any clear signs of a particle ejection, so panic is premature.
How does the "solar kitchen" work?
Imagine a giant nuclear boiler with invisible magnetic bundles. When they twist to the limit, an explosion occurs.
Charged particles travel to us for 1-2 days, hitting the magnetosphere — and geomagnetic disturbances begin. The real damage: disruptions in radio communication and GPS errors (navigators may lie). That's it.
And what about headaches?
A popular myth: magnetic storm = migraine. Scientists are skeptical. Physically, radiation cannot affect the body at a depth of 50 km from the earth.
Medical candidate Valery Litvinov (PNIPU), quoted by the portal transsibinfo.com, claims: a headache is psychosomatic. The body reacts to anxiety from changes in weather, stuffiness, or bright light, not to solar wind.
Stress and overload of the nervous system are the main culprits. External factors simply trigger an already tired body.
When is it really scary?
In March of this year, high-level danger events occurred — radiation storms that could indeed damage satellites and disrupt power grid operations. But this is rare.
As soon as you "googled" the symptoms — the internet has already suggested a version about a magnetic storm. But science debunks this myth. Perhaps instead of pills, it is worth simply slowing down the pace of life and learning to cope with stress? Our health depends on inner calm much more than on flares 150 million km away.
Другие Новости Кирова (НЗК)
Solar flare: only 7% short of disaster
Space is once again stirring minds — our star has unleashed a powerful energy burst, and scientists are closely monitoring its behavior. But are magnetic storms really as frightening as they are portrayed by social media? Let's find out if they affect our well-being and whether we should be worried about technology.
