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Solar storm could bring chaos 鈥 and a chance of spectacle

The effects of what is being called an exceptionally strong solar storm could bring the northern lights to many parts of sa国际传媒 and possibly cause damage to high-voltage power lines.
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Space Weather sa国际传媒 is warning the public that a 鈥渕ajor geomagnetic storm鈥 alert is in effect Friday, which might cause 鈥渋onospheric disturbances.鈥 This image provided by NASA shows a solar flare, as seen in the bright flash in the lower right, captured by NASA on May 9, 2024. NASA SOLAR DYNAMICS OBSERVATORY VIA THE CANADIAN PRESS/AP

Did you take a photo of the northern lights from Vancouver Island on Friday night? Send your pictures to [email protected] with the words "northern lights" in the subject line. Let us know where and when the photo was taken and the name of the photographer. We'll share some of our favourites in the paper and online

Keep your eyes on the skies: Vancouver Islanders could be in for some dancing aurora borealis this weekend — and potentially some power outages.

“Space weather is hard to predict … it’s complicated — but get outside and have a look,” said Justin Albert, a professor of physics and astronomy at the University of Victoria.

The effects of what is being called an exceptionally strong solar storm could bring the northern lights to many parts of sa国际传媒 and possibly cause damage to high-voltage power lines and satellites that could disrupt some communications. sa国际传媒’s space weather agency issued a warning Friday as a “major geomagnetic storm” hit the country.

Space Weather sa国际传媒 said the storm associated with massive solar flares was striking all of sa国际传媒 on Friday afternoon.

The U.S. National Oceanographic and Atmospheric Administration issued its first geomagnetic storm watch since 2005 and said the storm was a “potentially historic event.”

Such events can cause faults in power grids, and Space Weather sa国际传媒 said major storms like the one hitting ­Friday were also associated with very high risk of effects on geostationary satellites, and potential severe disruption to activities involving geomagnetism, including aerial surveys and directional drilling.

Albert said Islanders could see some northern lights if they look to magnetic north in the skies Friday night and tonight.

“You don’t have to go to the top of a mountain or a tall ­building,” he said. “Look up and if you see any green … enjoy it. It doesn’t happen very often.”

The storm could produce northern lights as far south in the U.S. as Alabama and right across southern sa国际传媒, according to NOAA. But it is hard to predict accurately, and experts stressed it would not be the dramatic curtains of colour normally associated with the northern lights, but more like splashes of green.

Robyn Fiori, a research scientist at the Canadian Hazards Information Service of Natural Resources sa国际传媒, said the storm is being caused by “coronal mass ejections” from the sun, sending vast amounts of solar matter toward Earth. Each ­eruption, the result of solar flares, can contain billions of tonnes of plasma and magnetic field from the sun’s outer ­atmosphere, or corona.

Fiori said three such ejections were “piggybacking on each other” to deliver a “really big blow” to the planet. One had arrived Friday and the other two were expected overnight, she said.

“When that [coronal mass ejection] arrives, our magnetic field starts to fluctuate and those fluctuations can have impacts in power systems … there can always be a danger that there could be an outage to the power system if these fluctuations get to be too big.”

A spokesman for sa国际传媒 Hydro said it has been preparing for the storm, and such events can potentially cause serious damage to high-voltage transmission systems, leading to outages. Kevin Aquino said while those effects aren’t expected, sa国际传媒 Hydro staff are monitoring for any impacts.

Although the storm poses a risk for high-voltage transmission lines for power grids, it doesn’t threaten the electrical lines ordinarily found in people’s homes, NOAA said.

Space Weather sa国际传媒 said the storm warning would be downgraded late Friday to a storm watch that will last until this afternoon.

The most intense solar storm in recorded history, in 1859, prompted auroras in Central America and even Hawaii. An extreme geomagnetic storm in 2003 took out power in Sweden and damaged power transformers in South Africa. A geomagnetic storm caused a nine-hour power outage across Quebec in 1989.

Albert said despite a ranking of 4 out of 5 on the solar-storm scale, it is difficult to predict the effects it will have here on Earth.

— With files from the Associated Press and The Canadian Press

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