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Monitoring Solar Activity with SDO

Intern at computer

At times, the sun erupts, hurling a magnetic cloud of solar material toward Earth. Racing at thousands of miles per second, and hundreds of times larger than the sun, this cloud of solar particles can cause a magnetic storm near Earth, disrupting satellite communications and—in worse case scenarios—overloading power transformers.

Here on Earth, Dhaneshvaran Krishnarao monitors satellite footage for this type of activity. He started at NASA in 2013 as an intern space weather forecaster after his professor at American University recommended the internship. Krishnarao returned to NASA’s Goddard Space Flight Center in Greenbelt, Maryland, to continue his work this summer.

“We’ll be looking at images, like x-ray data and UV data,” Krishnarao said. “We monitor everything to see if something crosses a certain threshold. If it does, we would send out notifications for NASA robotic mission operators.

Modern technology makes society more susceptible to the blackouts caused by solar storms. When struck by one of these huge clouds of solar material, called a coronal mass ejection, our planet’s magnetic fields jostle back and forth. This generates electric currents, radio waves, and accelerates particles. As the atmosphere changes, GPS satellite frequencies that must travel through the ionosphere can be disrupted, resulting in errors of now betray exact coordinates by a couple of yards. For airlines, military operations, farmers’ vehicles, and financial transaction that rely on GPS, this interference can prove damaging.

Another type of eruption from the sun, called a solar flare, can interfere with shortwave radios. These low frequency radio waves use the ionosphere as a mirror to reflect transmissions around the globe; but during a solar storm, they simply disappear up into the sky—unable to bounce off of an atmosphere so changed by these storms.

But our technology also allows us to monitor these solar events and take necessary preparations. Goddard trains intern forecasters in a space weather boot camp for two weeks. During this orientation period, presentations and lecturers train the interns to study past space weather events so they would know how to respond to certain space weather events.

“I now forecast eight hours a week,” Krishnarao said. “The rest of the time, I work on a project to use preexisting spacecraft to monitor solar conditions. This new system will allow mission operators to select a spacecraft and ascertain the likelihood of different risks occurring.”

Krishnarao hopes to continue working in astrophysics and heliophysics in grad school. He found the environment at NASA conducive to his education.

“They’re really pushing us and encouraging us,” Krishnarao said of his mentors. “They are our friends.”

NOAA’s Space Weather Prediction Center at http://spaceweather.gov is the U.S. government’s official source for space weather forecasts, alerts, watches and warnings.