The first space hurricane is confirmed over the North Pole. A team has discovered a swirling mass of plasma about 1000 kilometers across that is showering electrons into Earth's upper atmosphere.
Scientists have confirmed the existence of a space hurricane: a team led by Shandong University in China made the announcement after analyzing a swirling mass of plasma about 1000 kilometers wide spotted hundreds of kilometers above the North Pole.
The observations show a large cyclone-shaped auroral point with a near-zero flow center and strong circular horizontal plasma flow. All elements found in any hurricane which is formed in the lower atmosphere. The only difference is that it rains electrons and not water.
The space hurricane moved counterclockwise and lasted about eight hours before melting away.
Good news and bad news
The team that discovered the space hurricane warns that such storms could disrupt GPS systems. But they could also provide a greater understanding of the effects of space weather. The professor Mike Lockwood, Physicist at the University of Reading, says hurricanes could be a universal phenomenon on planets and moons with magnetic fields and plasma.
Until now it was not certain that space plasma hurricanes even existed: proving this with such a surprising observation is incredible. Plasma and magnetic fields in the atmospheres of planets exist throughout the universe, so the findings suggest that space hurricanes should be a widespread phenomenon.
Mike Lockwood, University of Reading
Just as tropical storms are associated with enormous amounts of energy, a space hurricane must arise from an unusually large and rapid transfer of solar wind energy and charged particles into the thermosphere, the upper part of Earth's atmosphere.
It is the first time that a hurricane has been observed in the Earth's thermosphere
“A hurricane is clearly associated with strong energy and mass transport. Therefore a hurricane in the Earth's upper atmosphere must be violent and efficiently transfer the energy and momentum of the solar wind/magnetosphere into the Earth's ionosphere. This is what we read in the study published in Nature.
The effects of the “passage” of a space hurricane? All to be verified: they will be able to tell us a lot about satellites, about disturbances in high frequency radio communications and about errors in GPS and communication systems.