Elon Musk’s Starlink has lost dozens of satellites that were caught in a geomagnetic storm a day after they were launched on February 3.
Up to 40 of the 49 satellites were impacted, Starlink said, causing them to fall from orbit before they could be commissioned.
Solar storms are magnetic plasma ejected at great speed from the solar surface.
• They occur during the release of magnetic energy associated with sunspots (‘dark’
regions on the Sun that are cooler than the surrounding photosphere), and can last
for a few minutes or hours.
• The solar storm that deorbited the satellites occurred on February 1 and 2, and its
powerful trails were observed on February 3.
• Not all solar flares reach Earth, but solar flares/storms, solar energetic particles
(SEPs), high-speed solar winds, and coronal mass ejections (CMEs) that come close
can impact space weather in near-Earth space and the upper atmosphere.
• Solar storms can hit operations of space-dependent services like global positioning
systems (GPS), radio, and satellite communications.
• Geomagnetic storms interfere with high-frequency radio communications and GPS
navigation systems. Aircraft flights, power grids, and space exploration programmes
are vulnerable.
• CMEs, with ejectiles loaded with matter travelling at millions of miles an hour, can
potentially create disturbances in the magnetosphere, the protective shield
surrounding the Earth.