Science Once-in-a-century solar superstorm could plunge the world into ‘internet apocalypse’, study says



Vishwam Sankaran


14 hours ago


Solar Storms Could Cause An “Internet Apocalypse”


A severe solar storm, which happens once in approximately 100 years, could catastrophically impact various human technologies on Earth, and plunge the world into an “internet apocalypse,” a new study says.


The Earth’s magnetic field protects its inhabitants from solar wind – consisting of charged particles streaming from the Sun – by deflecting the electric wind towards the planet’s poles and creating scenic auroras.


However, once in about 80-100 years, due to the Sun’s natural life cycle, these winds escalate into solar superstorms that could cause catastrophic internet outages covering the entire Earth and lasting several months, says the study, presented at SIGCOMM 2021 – the annual conference of the ACM Special Interest Group on Data Communication.


In the research, Sangeetha Abdu Jyothi from the University of California, Irvine and VMware Research, assessed the robustness of the current Internet infrastructure against such an extreme space weather event.



It found that long-distance optical fibre lines and submarine cables which are a vital part of the global internet infrastructure are vulnerable to the currents produced on the Earth’s crust by solar superstorms, also known as Coronal Mass Ejections (CME).


“A Coronal Mass Ejection (CME) involves the emission of electrically charged matter and accompanying magnetic field into space. When it hits the earth, it interacts with the earth’s magnetic field and produces Geomagnetically Induced Currents (GIC) on the crust,” Dr. Jyothi explained in a tweet.


The current from these solar storms can enter and damage long conductors such as power lines, the study noted.


“In today’s long-haul Internet cables, the optical fiber is immune to GIC. But these cables also have electrically powered repeaters at ~100 km intervals that are susceptible to damages,” Jyothi added.


While the probability of such events happening varies from 1.6 per cent to 12 per cent probability per decade, Jyothi says the chances increase during the Sun’s maximum activity period in its waxing and waning cycle.



Luckily, Jyothi says, modern technological advances have coincided with a period of weak solar activity.


However, with the sun expected to become more active in the near future, she says the current Internet infrastructure has not been stress-tested by strong solar events.


“In short, we have NO IDEA how resilient the current Internet infrastructure is against the threat of CMEs!,” she noted in a tweet.


Citing an example of how disastrous a CME could be for communications systems on Earth, Jyothi said the last big solar storms happened in 1859 (Carrington event) and 1921.


Studies have documented the significant damages caused by these solar storms to the communication network of the time – the telegraph network.


The current solar cycle, the study says, has the potential to be one of the strongest on record.


Compared to the previous cycle ending in 2019, which had a peak sunspot number of 116, the number of sunspots at the peak of the current cycle, Jyothi says, is “very high,” between 210 and 260.


“Since CMEs often originate in magnetically active regions near sunspots, a larger number of sunspots will increase the probability of a powerful CME. If this estimate proves accurate, it will also significantly increase the probability of a large-scale event in this decade,” she wrote in the study.


However, the study noted that the actual strength of this cycle would be evident only later in the decade as the solar cycle progresses.


The research also points that the impact of solar superstorms would not be uniform across the globe.


It says the internet infrastructure in higher latitudes, above the equator, face a higher risk, and the US has a high risk of being disconnected from Europe, while Asia is more likely to retain connectivity.


“Consider the most vulnerable long-distance submarine cables for example. They are concentrated in higher latitudes, particularly between the US and Europe,” Jyothi explained


The study underscores the need to consider the risk from solar storms while designing and deploying Internet infrastructure and applications, and calls for better resilience analysis on the global network.



“The paper is just scratching the surface of an important problem. A lot needs to be done to understand the risk and robustify our infrastructure,” Jyothi noted.


I have done a search of the title and could not find this article posted, so fingers crossed I am not late with this one.

Archive: https://archive.st/archive/2021/9/www.independent.co.uk/i7oj/
 
The internet going down suddenly would be the absolute worst case collapse scenario for the world at this point.

Huge amounts of critical infrastructure is automated online and major sectors of banking are completely digital. Supply chains would break down quickly. Businesses would collapse and millions/billions would be out of jobs. Banking would become insanely slow because everything would have to be done with pen/paper again. (If they can even find your account because most places went digital record keeping a decade ago.) Most banks don't actually have enough physical bills anymore to deal with normal day-to-day exchanges.

The second the grocery shelves went bare things would go Mad Max quickly. It would be quick too because we've seen that people would outright hoard thanks to the recent Covid-19 pandemic. People would group together into small rural towns for their food growth and communal protection, but the vast majority would be mowed down by raiders looking for spoils.

Major industries like medicine would fall apart. Basic life critical medications like antibiotics and insulin would only keep so long then dry up completely. Millions are dependent on these and other drugs daily to survive.

Humanity would ultimately survive, but it would be a mass dieoff with things going back to the 80's in most places that survived.
 
Isn't a Carrington event a mega EMP?

The net? Everywhere I heard it would fry everything electronic for good.

( Granted it can be that I only found hyped up stuff like climate change. But if it even only knocks most machines out...)

80s? Yeah 1880s. If such an event ever occured and the goverment manages to somehow pull through, we are still set back to the age of coal and steam.

So better have your buggie, your barn and your butter churner ready.

For it would be an Amish paradise!
 
Isn't a Carrington event a mega EMP?

The net? Everywhere I heard it would fry everything electronic for good.

A CME storm isn't really a "pulse" so I'd say it's wrong to call the resulting EM storm a type EMP. Pretty much EMP just refers to what you get with a nuclear detonation, which is a brief, localized, intense amount of generated EM radiation.

The real trouble with a CME is that the duration and intensity can be great enough to cause failure of electrical infrastructure. Electrical failures tend to cause fires. With water pumps fried and trucks that won't start there is little chance to fight them.

It's one thing to lose some electronics and internet, but a whole other thing to also lose electricity entirely while the world burns.
 
This sums up my feelings nicely
rorschach-do-it.gif
 
Wasn't there a WEF or conference on what would happen if the Internet went down, just a few weeks ago?
 
I had a dream last night that a big-ass ball of fire appeared in the sky and went into the sun and everyone was losing their shit. I'd say "Screenshot this, I'm a prophet" but if it comes true then you won't be able to see it again. You'll just have to sit there in the post-internet hellscape knowing that I am a sorceress.
 
Good. I’ve been telling everyone to invest in gold. RIP to the motherfuckers who didn’t listen.
 
banks et al can always do what they did before the internet; use satellites for phone calls, faxs and telecomms.
What? The satellites would probably be damaged too, along with a lot of the hardware to speak with them from the ground. Anyways, we didn't need a study to tell us that a massive EMP from the sun would fuck our shit up. That's basic logic.
 
I had a dream last night that a big-ass ball of fire appeared in the sky and went into the sun and everyone was losing their shit. I'd say "Screenshot this, I'm a prophet" but if it comes true then you won't be able to see it again. You'll just have to sit there in the post-internet hellscape knowing that I am a sorceress.
How I wish you were right. Unfortunately, with how shit always is, nothing will come from it, and nothing interesting will happen.
 
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