Our (((weak))) magnetic field did its job just fine as always.
Are you suggesting the Carrington Event never happened? That we would be fine if it did?
I really don't understand what your point is, care to elaborate?
Are you suggesting the Carrington Event never happened? That we would be fine if it did?
The Carrington Event was an atypical CME and solar flare combination that was higher in energy than the recent X-class storm. It was massive and resulted in aurora activity around the world. The recent storm didn't have that big and far reaching aurora activity. The effects on the telegraph system were not actually that significant and actually played out because of the spread-out nature of the lines which caused a bigger voltage potential differential. Modern systems are better able to handle such a thing and have safety systems in place for various fault types that a solar storm can bring.
I really don't understand what your point is, care to elaborate?
A bunch of people, including here on Poal, were convinced this was going to be a game over style happening for technology. I don't think the fear is warranted because it is driven by people who don't have knowledge in physics and electronics yet they are still pretending to be experts on the subjects. They just like to be afraid. It's a disease. :)
The Carrington Event's effects were mostly seen on very long telegraph wires, which are rather different from today's power distribution wires. Mitigations against EMP have been put in place at many US substations which will reduce the effect. Communications lines are mostly fiber now, and they shouldn't be affected due to the way the power is injected. We're seeing disruptions in some radio communications, and while some physical issues may pop up I don't think they'll be many. Think of it like a Y2K event.
Fiber optics are very much at risk, along with power infrastructure.
I disagree. Care to provide more info?
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