Thursday, March 25, 2021

The Case of the Cloudy Filters: Solving the Mystery of the Degrading Sunlight Detectors

The filters are used in the Sun-facing satellites that give us advance warning of solar storms.
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The Case of the Cloudy Filters: Solving the Mystery of the Degrading Sunlight Detectors

Two metal rectangles (EUV filters) side by side; the one on the left is darker.

More than 150 years ago, the Sun blasted Earth with a massive cloud of hot charged particles. This plasma blob generated a magnetic storm on Earth that caused sparks to leap out of telegraph equipment and even started a few fires. Now called the Carrington Event, after one of the astronomers who observed it, a magnetic storm like this could happen again anytime, only now it would affect more than telegraphs: It could damage or cause outages in wireless phone networks, GPS systems, electrical grids powering life-saving medical equipment and more.

Sun-facing satellites monitor the Sun's ultraviolet (UV) light to give us advance warning of solar storms, both big ones that could cause a Carrington-like event as well as the smaller, more common disturbances that can temporarily disrupt communications. One key piece of equipment used in these detectors is a tiny metal filter that blocks out everything except the UV signal researchers need to see.

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