ESA is looking to develop a spacecraft that could for the first time provide us with a «side - view» of the Sun, improving our ability to predict potentially damaging
space weather events such as coronal mass ejections (CMEs).
Space weather events such as geomagnetic storms can disturb Earth's magnetic field, interfering with electric power grids, radio communication, GPS systems, satellite operations, oil and gas drilling and air travel.
Not exact matches
Large
space -
weather events,
such as geomagnetic storms, can alter the incoming radio waves — a distortion that scientists can use to determine the concentration of plasma particles in the upper atmosphere.
«Our analysis suggests that
such space weather events may prove to be a key driver of atmospheric losses for exoplanets orbiting an active young Sun - like star,» the authors write.
Transient
events such as micrometeoroid dust particle impacts can be considered as potential external suppliers of water into all other outer planet stratospheres, modifying locally and temporarily the
space weather conditions at these environments.
In the
event of unforeseen circumstances,
such as a job loss, the emergency fund provides reasonable breathing
space for
weathering unwelcome storms.
events, there was: a
weather hazard recorded for Jordan Montana, where the temperature fell to minus 41 degrees Celsius; a continuation of the nuclear biohazard at Fukushima, Japan; an earthquake registered in El Guarco Valley, Costa Rica, severity as yet unknown; a severe
weather event — a hailstorm in Woolgoolga, Australia; and something called «an
event into
space» in Greece, which, the last time
such a thing was noted back in November, was ultimately explained by RSOE this way: