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The 23rd cycle: learning to live with a stormy star

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On March 13, 1989, the entire Quebec power grid collapsed, automatic garage doors in California suburbs began to open and close without apparent reason and microchip production came to a halt in the Northeast; in space, communications satellites had to be manually repointed after flipping upside down, pressure readings on hydrogen tank supplies on board the Space Shuttle Discovery were peaking, causing NASA to consider aborting the mission.

What was the cause of all these seemingly disparate events?

Sten Odenwald presents evidence of the mischievous - and potentially catastrophic - power of solar storms and the far-reaching effects of the coming "big one" brewing in the sky and estimated to culminate in the 23rd cycle in the year 2001 and beyond.;When the sun undergoes its cyclic "solar maximum", a time when fierce solar flares and storms erupt, fantastic auroras will be seen around the world.

But the breath-taking spectacles will herald a potentially disastrous chain of events that merit greater preparation than Y2K.

Is anyone listening?;"The 23rd Cycle" traces the history of solar storms and the ways in which they have been perceived by astronomers - and even occasionally covered up by the satellite companies.

Punctuated with an insert of colour images showing the erupting sun, the book includes a history of the record of auroral sightings, accounts of communications blackouts from the 20th century, industries sensitive to solar storms and radiation and health issues.

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£33.99
Product Details
Columbia University Press
0231505930 / 9780231505932
eBook (Adobe Pdf, EPUB)
538.746
24/07/2002
English
181 pages
Copy: 10%; print: 10%
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