Powerful Mother’s Day geomagnetic storm created radio-disrupting bubbles in Earth’s upper atmosphere


Researchers from Kyushu University in Japan have provided some new insights about the powerful geomagnetic storm that flared up last Mother’s Day, after a big solar storm hit Earth.

The work focuses on the storm’s activity in a region of Earth’s ionosphere called the E layer, which sits in the upper atmosphere about 56 miles to 75 miles (90 to 120 kilometers) above sea level.

“The sporadic E layer hasn’t been studied very much during the storm because it appeared unaffected by solar storms,” study leader Huixin Liu said in a statement.

Visualization of Earth’s magnetosphere being hit by the Mother’s Day geomagnetic storm on May 10-11, 2024. This is a screen shot from NASA’s Scientific Visualization Studio. (Image credit: NASA’s Scientific Visualization Studio and NASA DRIVE Science Center for Geospace Storms)

“But we wanted to see if something as powerful as the Mother’s Day geomagnetic storm did anything to the E layer,” Liu added. “What we found was very interesting.”



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