Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: http://library.iigm.res.in:8080/xmlui/handle/123456798/140
Title: Extreme space weather event in 1903 October/November: an outburst from the quiet sun
Authors: Hayakawa, Hisashi
Ribeiro, Paulo
Vaquero, José M.
Gallego, María Cruz
Knipp, Delores J.
Mekhaldi, Florian
Bhaskar, Ankush
Oliveira, Denny M.
Notsu, Yuta
Carrasco, Víctor M. S.
Caccavari, Ana
Veenadhari, Bhaskara
Mukherjee, Shyamoli
Ebihara, Yusuke
Keywords: Solar-terrestrial interactions
Solar coronal mass ejections
Solar flares
Sunspots
Geomagnetic fields
Solar storm
Issue Date: 2020
Citation: Astrophysical Journal Letters, v. 897, 1, https://doi.org/10.3847/2041-8213/ab6a18
Abstract: While the Sun is generally more eruptive during its maximum and declining phases, observational evidence shows certain cases of powerful solar eruptions during the quiet phase of solar activity. Occurring in the weak Solar Cycle 14 just after its minimum, the extreme space weather event in 1903 October–November is one of these cases. Here, we reconstruct the time series of geomagnetic activity based on contemporary observational records. With the midlatitude magnetograms, the 1903 magnetic storm is thought to be caused by a fast coronal mass ejection (≈1500 km s−1 ) and is regarded as a superstorm with an estimated minimum of the equivalent disturbance storm time index (Dst’) of ≈−531 nT. The reconstructed time series has been compared with the equatorward extension of auroral oval (≈44°.1 in invariant latitude) and the time series of telegraphic disturbances. This case study shows that potential threats posed by extreme space weather events exist even during weak solar cycles or near their minima.
URI: http://library.iigm.res.in:8080/xmlui/handle/123456798/140
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