Did space weather really knock out cell phone service in North America?

jueves, 22 febrero 2024 21:53 UTC

Did space weather really knock out cell phone service in North America?

It's a hot topic today... North America woke up this morning with nationwide cell phone outage for AT&T. Is this caused by the two X-class solar flares from sunspot region 3590? A lot of people seem to think that is the case but this is completely false. Christian Harris from Space Weather Trackers made a great post explaining why space weather is not to blame for this outage. Correlation is not causation. Read his post below!

Now I'm sure if you're in North America, you've heard about the nationwide cell phone outage for AT&T starting early this morning, that some are actively connecting to the cause of such being the solar flares. In fact, space.com specifically states: "Two outbursts from the sun caused widespread cellphone outages throughout the United States on Thursday (Feb. 22)."

This is blatantly wrong, and is a huge reason the phrase "Correlation is not causation" is a thing at all.

First off, the solar flares only affect high frequency communications, radio wavelengths (1-30 MHz or so) that depend on a certain layer of the ionosphere to bounce back down to Earth for communication instead become absorbed on the dayside of Earth causing radio black outs for a period of time. Cell phones not only do not need the ionosphere to function, but they operate on frequencies three hundred times higher than these radio wavelengths that are affected by solar flares.

Secondly, the solar flares took place during the night in North America, which means the solar flares did not affect the ionosphere here at any point, so how would the cell phone outages become connected?

There are indirect ways a solar flare could cause issues with cell phones, but they are geomagnetic in origin, and rely on eruptions and affects to Earth's magnetic field, none of which took place during the outages. It is very likely the cell phone outages are due to something far more simple in AT&Ts network.

Thank you for reading this article! Did you have any trouble with the technical terms used in this article? Our help section is the place to be where you can find in-depth articles, a FAQ and a list with common abbreviations. Still puzzled? Just post on our forum where we will help you the best we can! Never want to miss out on a space weather event or one of our news articles again? Subscribe to our mailing list, follow us on Twitter and Facebook and download the SpaceWeatherLive app for Android and iOS!

Últimas noticias

Apoye a SpaceWeatherLive.com!

Mucha gente viene a SpaceWeatherLive para seguir la actividad del Sol o previsión de aurora, pero con esta cantidad de tráfico se incrementan los costos del servidor. ¡Considere hacer una donación si disfruta de SpaceWeatherLive para que podamos mantener el sitio web en línea!

54%
Apoya a SpaceWeatherLive con nuestro merchandise
Échale un ojo a nuestro merchandise

Hechos clima espacial

Último evento clase X2024/03/28X1.1
Último evento clase M2024/04/27M3.0
Últimas tormentas geomagnéticas2024/04/26Kp5+ (G1)
Días sin manchas
Último día sin manchas2022/06/08
Promedio de manchas solares mensuales
marzo 2024104.9 -19.8
Last 30 days139.7 +33.3

Efemérides*

Llamarada solar
12001M1.01
22024C8.3
32024C7.7
42000C7.46
52023C7.1
ApG
11937128G4
2196960G3
3196084G3
4195664G3
5198561G3
*desde 1994

Redes sociales