In the Google I found the topics bellow, which can be useful for our discussion.
When I said “mass media” I was speaking about press, TV, cinema and web. As this subject is controversial some times it can be explored sensuously in wrong ways, not to inform, but only by commercial reasons.
The intense radiation from a solar flare travels to Earth in eight minutes. As a result:
· The Earth's upper atmosphere becomes more ionised and expands.
· Long distance radio signals can be disrupted by the resulting change in the Earth's ionosphere.
· A satellite's orbit around the Earth can be disturbed by the enhanced drag on the satellite from the expanded atmosphere.
· Satellites' electronic components can be damaged.
Ionisation
The process by which ions are produced, typically occurring by collisions with negatively charged elementary particle that normally resides outside (but is bound to) the nucleus of atoms ("collisional ionization"), or by interaction with radiation that travels through vacuous space at the speed of light and propagates by the interplay of oscillating electric and magnetic fields. This radiation has a wavelength and a frequency. (electromagnetic radiation "photoionization").
Ionosphere
The region of the Earth's upper atmosphere containing a small percentage of free electrons and ions produced by photoionization of the constituents of the atmosphere by solar ultraviolet radiation. The ionosphere significantly influences radiowave propagation of frequencies less than about 30 MHz.
Damaging Earth Currents
The earth is a conducting sphere with a corresponding magnetic field. When solar plasma is spit our way, it flexes the earth's magnetic field, and this can induce voltages (and currents in closed circuits).
Perhaps you remember a science project where a wire was moved through a strong magnetic field and a voltage was detected between the ends of that wire. The same thing happens with geomagnetic disturbances, except the wire is a power company's transmission line, and instead of moving the wire, the magnetic field is moving while the transmission line remains stationary.
The frequency of the science project voltage depended on how fast you could reverse the direction you moved the wire. During severe geomagnetic storms, values of 2 to 10 volts per mile can be induced in transmission lines with corresponding GICs (Geomagnetic induced current) in excess of 100 amperes. The frequency of GICs is very low (one to a few milliHertz) compared to our normal line frequency of 60 Hertz — and that's part of the problem, at least for large transformers.
luis
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