Now let’s talk about what happened to Starlink. I’ll warn you right away – our assumptions smell strongly of conspiracy theories, but father of one of us devoted his whole life to studying the ionosphere and auroral phenomena. So there is a base.
Interruptions and freezes of Starlink in the Kharkov region began on the night of 4th-5th October – exactly at the moment when the so-called “light beams” were noticed in Belgorod and other Russian cities.
I’ll be brief – not only Americans have HAARP that can shake up the ionosphere. Russia has the Sura project, and besides, several over-the-horizon radars capable of practically the same thing – creating a kind of storm in the ionosphere – these are auroral phenomena, but in nature they occur in unstable regions of the ionosphere, closer to the Earth’s magnetic poles (the auroras). We saw a demonstration of these abilities – and yes, because of this ionospheric storm not only Starlink “falls off”, but we saw with our own eyes that in the Kharkov oblast the Amos 3 / 7-4.0 ° W satellite “fell off”.
That is, on the night of 4-5 October, Russians showed Musk that they can suppress Starlink on a significant scale. That is why Musk rushed to play peacemaker – and not vice versa.
Hence the conclusion – when Russia conducts an offensive in winter, do not count on Starlink.”
CO-ROTATING INTERACTION REGION: NOAA forecasters say that a CIR (co-rotating interaction region) could hit Earth’s magnetic field on Sept. 17th. CIRs are transition zones between slow- and fast-moving solar wind streams. Solar wind plasma piles up in these regions, producing shock-like structures that can mimic CMEs and spark bright Arctic auroras. Solar flare alerts:SMS Text.
THE STARLINK INCIDENT: A minor geomagnetic storm is supposed to be minor. That’s why even experts were surprised on Feb. 4, 2022, when dozens of Starlink satellites started falling out of the sky. A weak CME had hit Earth’s magnetic field, and the resulting G1-class (minor) storm was bringing them down:
Above: A Starlink satellite breaks up over Puerto Rico on Feb. 7, 2022. Credit: The Sociedad de Astronomia del Caribe
How could this happen? A new paper published in the research journal Space Weather provides the answer.
“Although it was only ‘minor,’ the storm pumped almost 1200 gigawatts of energy into Earth’s atmosphere,” explains lead author Tong Dang of the University of Science and Technology of China. “This extra energy heated Earth’s upper atmosphere and sharply increased aerodynamic drag on the satellites.”
SpaceX launched the satellites from Cape Canaveral on Feb. 3, 2022. Forty-nine (49) Starlinks were crowded inside the Falcon 9 rocket; less than a quarter would survive.
The Starlink launch was sandwiched between two minor geomagnetic storms (right) possibly caused by an Earth-directed CME that left the sun on Jan. 30th (left) pic.twitter.com/ZhI2LesRND
As was SpaceX’s practice at the time, the satellites were deployed at an altitude of 210 km–their first stop en route to an operational altitude near 600 km. In the satellite business, 210 km is considered to be low, barely above the atmosphere. SpaceX starts there in case any satellite malfunctions after launch. From 210 km, a “bad sat” can be easily de-orbited.
A little too easily, as it turns out.
Using a physics-based computer model named “TIEGCM,” Dang and colleagues simulated conditions during the storm. As geomagnetic energy heated Earth’s atmosphere, the air density at 210 km increased globally by 20% with “hot spots” as high as 60%. This movie shows what happened:
Starlink dodged the worst spots. “The satellites did not hit any of the 60% regions,” says Dang. “But that didn’t save them.” The weaker 20% enhancements were enough to bring down 38 out of 49 satellites.
To prevent a repeat, SpaceX has started launching to 320 km instead of 210 km. Earth’s atmosphere has to reach that much higher to drag the satellites back during a geomagnetic storm. Since the change, more than 1200 additional Starlink satellites have been launched on 24 rockets without incident.
There’s still danger, though. “Air density at 320 km is an order of magnitude less (compared to 210 km), but it’s not completely safe,” cautions Dang’s co-author Jiuhou Lei, also from the University of Science and Technology of China. “During an extreme geomagnetic storm, density could increase from 200% to 800% even at these higher altitudes.”
Extreme storms may be in the offing. Young Solar Cycle 25 is just getting started. The profusion of minor storms we are observing today will intensify in the years ahead especially as we approach Solar Max around 2025.
Recent Findings From Iceland’s Fagradalsfjall Eruptions Change What We Know About How Volcanoes Work (11 min)
We have covered this a number of times already but it is important and a harbinger of things to come:
Over 40 Starlink Satellites Have Been Lost After A Geomagnetic Storm – They Are Headed Back To Earth (11 min)
Over 40 Starlink Satellites Have Been Lost After a Geomagnetic Storm https://bit.ly/33cEm6g Spectacular Video Shows Starlink Satellite Disintegrating Over Puerto Rico After Geomagnetic Storm https://bit.ly/3uIaHgO Viewing archive of Friday, 4 February 2022 official Kp-index https://bit.ly/3szeURe ACE 4Day Browse Plots – 2022/02/04 (2022 035) https://bit.ly/3uHNZ8w
What is Geomagnetic storm, which destroyed 40 SpaceX satellites? (2 min)
Skyfall
Does this have anything to do with reduced magnetic protection or is it turning on 5G that is doing it?