HONOLULU —


Rapidly moving solar storms carrying a billion tons of charged gas through space let out a thunderous “scream” in radio waves before they unleash the kind of




radiation storms that slam into Earth’s magnetic field with the potential to disrupt satellites and communication facilities on the ground.

A team of astronomers presented this finding here today at a meeting of the American Astronomical Society, one that could give astronauts and engineers forewarning of a type of coronal mass ejection (CME) capable of showering Earth, spacecraft and space travelers with damaging radiation.

Coronal mass ejections are violent solar eruptions that carry massive amounts of electrically charged gas called plasma from the




sun’s atmosphere. Once unleashed, these plasma clouds race away from the




sun at up to a million kilometers




per hour. Depending on the orientation of the associated magnetic fields, Earth-ward eruptions can generate magnetic storms that can flick a giant circuit breaker of sorts on Earth, causing widespread power outages.





Some coronal mass ejections also bring intense radiation storms that can disable satellites or cause cancer in unprotected astronauts.





As a CME plows through space it bumps into the charged particles constantly blown from the




sun called the solar wind, resulting in a shock wave. If the shock is powerful enough, it accelerates particles in the solar wind to high speeds capable of triggering radiation storms.

“Some CMEs produce radiation storms, and some don’t, or at least the level of radiation is significantly lower,” said lead researcher NatchimuthukGopalswamy of NASA’s Goddard


Space Flight Center in Greenbelt, Md.

For instance, the Solar and Heliospheric Observatory




has observed more than 10,000 CMEs over the past 10 years, Gopalswamy said, and only about 1 percent to 2 percent of them produce




particle storms.



“The trick is to identify the ones that can produce dangerous radiation, so we can warn astronauts and satellite operators,” Gopalswamy said.





Gopalswamy
and his team may have found a way to do just that. Like the calm before a storm –




but louder –




they found that CMEs with shocks capable of unleashing dangerous




storms are preceded by “screams” in radio waves as they barrel through the solar wind.



They analyzed nearly 500 large coronal mass ejections, finding that while the so-called radio-loud CMEs




those that were preceded by




screams









led to radiation storms, none of the more than 150 radio-quiet CMEs were followed by such storms.



Since radio waves travel at the speed of light, the screams could give forewarning of an impending radio, or radiation, storm.

“We can use a CME’s radio noise to give warning that it is generating a radiation storm that will hit us soon,” Gopalswamy said. “This will give astronauts and satellite operators anywhere between a few tens of minutes to a couple hours to prepare, depending on how fast the particles are moving.”

The team also noticed that most of the radio-loud CMEs came from the




sun’s equator, a place known as an active region for solar flares, while most of the radio-quiet CMEs sprouted from the




sun’s edges.