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News Image Why we’ve been seeing the northern lights so often lately

Yet another wave of green and purple auroras will shimmer in the night sky tonight and Friday evening over parts of the continental United States, likely visible as far south as Washington state, Iowa, and New York after a strong geomagnetic storm struck Earth at 11:15 am ET. It’s the latest display in an already rambunctious year for space weather. NOAA’s Space Weather Prediction Center issued a geomagnetic storm watch for October 10, noting that the storm has reached G3, or “strong,” strength, and could become “severe.” That’s the level at which power systems at high latitudes could set off high-voltage alarms, navigation instruments will have to account for interference, and spacecraft may need to make adjustments to stay aloft. The wave of solar wind will also extend the reach of auroras.  pic.twitter.com/AyOHxM91E4 The current wave of celestial activity began on October 8, 93 million miles away at a huge sunspot on our friendly neighborhood star. Sunspots are patches of the sun’s surface with unusually strong magnetic fields and they appear as dark spots. The boundaries of these spots are ripe for storms that trigger solar flares, large eruptions of radiation. They also foment coronal mass ejections (CME), bursts of magnetized plasma from the sun’s corona, its outermost layer.  The sunspot set off a massive flare and a CME that sprayed the solar system with high-energy particles. “This is a very speedy CME,” said Shawn Dahl, a space weather forecaster at NOAA’s Space Weather Prediction Center, during a press conference this week. The CME is traveling 2.5 million mph, the “fastest CME that we’ve really measured” pointed toward Earth in the current sunspot cycle, Dahl added. When these particles collide with the Earth’s atmosphere, they create a phenomenon similar to how neon lights work, exciting gasses in the atmosphere and making them glow, creating auroras.  They typically cluster near the Earth’s poles (hence “northern lights”), but if enough energetic solar particles charge up the sky, auroras can reach much closer to the equator, which is why we’ve been seeing them all over the globe lately. This year, the sun is at the peak of its activity cycle. Roughly every 11 years, the sun’s magnetic poles reverse and as that flip approaches, there tends to be much more magnetic activity and thus more sunspots at the surface.  Anticipating how this activity will ripple toward our home planet is an important task, not just so we Earthlings can get our cameras ready and ooh and aah at the nighttime colors; space weather can create problems for communication, navigation, and the power grid.  Michael Wiltberger, deputy director of the High Altitude Observatory at the National Science Foundation’s National Center for Atmospheric Research, noted that predicting space weather is a lot like forecasting terrestrial weather. The weather we typically experience on the ground is driven by heat, moisture, and wind while space weather is driven by the electromagnetism of stars and planets. But both space and terrestrial weather emerge at the confluence of short- and long-term drivers playing out over a variety of different regions. While we don’t usually experience space weather on the ground, it generates a constant burbling mix of subtle and severe influences on the tools of our modern world.  “There’s stuff going on all the time that affects a wide range of things from radio communications to lifetimes of satellites to radiation risks to astronauts in space,” Wiltberger said.  And like your local TV weather experts, scientists studying space weather draw on a variety of instruments and models to generate useful forecasts with bulletins and visuals. On its website, the Space Weather Prediction Center produces predictions for “essential space weather communities” like aviation, emergency management, satellites, and space weather enthusiasts.  The key tools for space weather forecasting are spacecraft that monitor the flow of solar wind and the direction of the magnetic field. “It’s important because if it’s aligned in the direction of the Earth’s magnetic field, we’re not going to get a lot of energy dumped into the system,” Wiltberger said. “But if it’s in the opposite direction then the magnetic fields can interact and get more energy and more direct coupling during these geomagnetic storms.”  These measurements are then coupled with readings from ground-based cameras and magnetometers and fed into models to figure out how a rowdy sun will light up the Earth. Right now, one of the main goals is to extend the lead time for forecasts of how disruptive a geomagnetic storm will be. While scientists can see coronal mass ejections days before they start to impact Earth, they can’t easily figure out the strength and direction of the magnetic field, which, again, is the key factor in how much energy the Earth suddenly absorbs.  Even small hits from the sun can be impactful. GPS, for example, relies on timing signals between satellites to pinpoint locations on the ground. A geomagnetic storm can create delays in these signals, throwing off critical measurements. “If you’re driving your car, probably not a big deal,” Wiltberger said. “But if you’re doing precision agriculture and you’re trying to use it to tell you where to put the water on the seed that you just planted and you need really good accuracy, it’s a concern.” Satellites can be vulnerable to solar storms in other ways as well. On February 3, 2022, SpaceX launched 49 Starlink internet satellites into low Earth orbit, but a geomagnetic storm struck the next day. The storm increased the density of the atmosphere, creating unexpected drag and forcing most of the satellites to re-enter and burn up in the Earth’s atmosphere. The company said the nearly 6,000-strong Starlink satellite fleet weathered the recent storms just fine.  One of the biggest concerns is what a strong solar storm could do to electricity systems. Wiltberger said one could imagine a gargantuan, fast-moving coronal mass ejection that hits the Earth just 24 hours after leaving the sun.  If the magnetic field in this ejection happens to line up in the opposite direction of the Earth’s, it will create a big shift in the Earth’s magnetic field. A changing magnetic field, you may recall from your electromagnetism classes, can induce a current in a conductor, like, say, power transmission lines. That can then disrupt power delivery or cause parts of the grid to trip offline. Still, even a severe coronal mass ejection is unlikely to trigger a civilization-stopping blackout. “We’re probably not going to lose the power grid, but the power grid may actually have to take steps to bring more power generation capability online, defer maintenance, do those types of things,” Wiltberger said.  And perhaps losing a few lights on the ground for a while isn’t such a bad thing when the night sky lights up.  Update, October 10, 1:50 pm: This story was originally published on May 14, 2024, and has been updated to include details about aurora visibility following another geomagnetic storm.

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News Image Amazon’s Rufus AI Shopping Assistant Now Lets Some Shoppers Check Price History

Is a deal really a deal? Amazon’s ChatGPT competitor, a chatbot it calls Rufus, will now answer some user questions on price changes.

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News Image Best 75 October Prime Day Deals You Can Still Snag (2024)

Amazon's fall Prime Day sale is over, but these deals are still going strong.

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News Image Amazon Slashes the Price of the WD_Black SSD by 56% Even Though Prime Day Has Ended

You can still save nearly $400 on a 4TB SSD so you can play even more games without deleting the old ones.

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Infrastructure Minister hopes to open Lelystad Airport for holiday flights in 2025

Minister Barry Madlener of Infrastructure hopes to open Lelystad Airport for holiday flights next year, he told

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News Image Violent threats against FEMA swirl on social media

FEMA employees scrambling to respond to the devastation caused by hurricanes Milton and Helene are facing a new, unexpected challenge: violent threats on social media. TikTok posts either calling for violence or applauding unverified claims about physical attacks against FEMA personnel have garnered millions of views, according to a report yesterday from nonprofit Media Matters for America. X has also been fertile ground for threats of violence against FEMA, says another analysis published yesterday by the Institute for Strategic Dialogue (ISD). “This content is reaching millions of people and, in some instances, poses a credible risk to public safety,” ISD says. Social media misinformation has fed distrust in FEMA, which officials warn...

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The true cost of game piracy: 20 percent of revenue, according to a new study

Throughout the game industry's short history, there's been ample debate about how much piracy actually impacts a game's legitimate sales. On one side, some publishers try to argue that every single pirated download should count as a "lost sale" that they would have logged in a theoretical piracy-free world. On the other side, some wiseacres argue that most pirates would never consider paying for a legitimate version of the game in the first place or that piracy can actually be useful as a word-of-mouth promotional tool. While the true effect of piracy on sales revenue is likely somewhere between those two extremes, piracy's precise financial impact on a game has always been hard to nail down. Now, though, a recently published study uses post-release cracks of Denuvo's DRM protections as a sort of natural experiment on games sales in pre- and post-piracy worlds. The results "imply an average proportionate loss of revenue of around 19 percent in each week of release if a crack is available," according to the study, suggesting that effective DRM can actually have a significant impact on a publisher's bottom line. In "The Revenue Effects of Denuvo Digital Rights Management on PC Video Games," published in the peer-reviewed journal Entertainment Computing, UNC research associate William Volckmann examines 86 different Denuvo-protected games initially released on Steam between September 2014 and the end of 2022. That sample includes many games where Denuvo protection endured for at least 12 weeks (when new sales tend to drop off to "negligible" amounts for most games) and many others where earlier cracks allowed for widespread piracy at some point. Read full article

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Bluesky joins Threads to court users frustrated by Meta’s moderation issues

Social networking startup Bluesky is seizing the moment. Amid ongoing moderation issues affecting X rival Instagram Threads, the decentralized X competitor Bluesky has created an account on Meta’s newest platform. In doing so, the startup aims to capitalize on the discussions now taking place on Threads, where a number of users are threatening to leave […]

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Tesla’s Robotaxi reveal, Palantir owns some of Faraday Future, and the Strava for EVs

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News Image Fake Photos of Disney World Destroyed by Hurricane Milton Flood Social Media

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News Image Marriott agrees to pay $52 million settlement after multiple data breaches

Marriott agreed to pay a $52 million settlement to 49 states and Washington, DC, over a series of data breaches that occurred between 2014 and 2020, affecting more than 334 million customers. As part of a separate agreement, the Federal Trade Commission is also requiring Marriott and its subsidiary, Starwood Hotels & Resorts Worldwide, to implement an information security program to settle charges over the data breaches. “Marriott’s poor security practices led to multiple breaches affecting hundreds of millions of customers,” Samuel Levine, the director of the FTC’s Bureau of Consumer Protection, said in a statement. “The FTC’s action today, in coordination with our state partners, will ensure that Marriott improves its data security...

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News Image Star Trek: Lower Decks‘ New Trailer Has a Crisis on Infinite Ensigns Kim

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News Image U.S. Army Bans Delta-8 and Tells Soldiers Not to Eat Poppy Seeds, Either

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News Image Prime Day May Be Over But These Apple AirTags Are Still 19% off

Get an individual Apple AirTag for $25 or four for just $80 even though Prime Day has come and gone.

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Fidelity Investments says data breach affects over 77,000 people

Fidelity Investments, a Boston-based multinational financial services company, disclosed that the personal information of over 77,000 customers was exposed after its systems were breached in August....

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News Image TikTokers Investigate Why Someone Is Dropping Piss Bottles in This California Town

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News Image Prime Day Deals Are Still Live with 50% Off Beats Solo 4 for You to Toss Out Your Old Headphones

You can't pass up a pair of Beats for under $100, but you'll need to act fast if you want to score this deal.

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LinkedIn says 10M people have signed up as freelancers on its Services Marketplace

More than 100,000 people have been laid off in the technology industry alone this year, and — either by circumstance or choice — at least some of them are not heading back into exclusively full-time work. LinkedIn launched a freelancer marketplace in 2021 to capture some of that activity. Now, at a time when other […]

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News Image Agatha All Along‘s Latest Episode Is All About Its Cliffhanger Ending

The latest episode of Marvel's witchy Disney+ series invites you to a slumber party massacre.

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News Image Jupiter’s Great Red Spot Is Shapeshifting in Ways ‘Never Identified Before’

The famous red eye of the storm squeezes in and out for reasons unknown.

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How stuck is the startup exit market? Pretty stuck, says PitchBook

Deal analysis outfit PitchBook today released a new report that underscores how fewer exits are impacting the startup investing ecosystem.  Among its findings? Beyond what’s commonly known — that a lot of the fundings today are insider rounds and bridge financings aimed at keeping companies alive — cash back to the limited partners (LPs) who […]

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