Magnetosphere starting to crack. Time is running out. If you don't want to miss out on Qiyamah, you… https://t.co/YZyvPoH9Vk
— Al-Muhaymin Trust (@almuhaymintrust) 4 ноября 2016 г.
The blast was registered in June 2015 after a huge cloud of plasma released from the Sun struck the Earth at a speed of some 2.5 million kph.
The report in Physical Review Letters states that the impact of the solar storm caused the Earth’s magnetic shield to compress, leading to massive geomagnetic atmospheric anomalies. Storm effects included aurora borealis and radio signal interruptions across several continents.
#OSAUIA And the beautiful results we get from plasma in the solar winds, Van Allen belts and our magnetosphere! pic.twitter.com/qbEQr44oKb
— H Frank Gaertner (@osaublog2) 19 октября 2016 г.
At the time, India’s GRAPES-3 muon telescope, the world’s most sensitive cosmic-ray monitoring system, recorded a powerful blast of solar energy that lasted for over two hours.
"It indicates a transient weakening of Earth's magnetic shield, and may hold clues for a better understanding of future superstorms that could cripple modern technological infrastructure on Earth, and endanger the lives of the astronauts in space," the report says.
The magnetosphere, the Earth’s energetic protecting shield, prevents the highly-dangerous radiation of the Sun from destroying life on the planet. However, powerful geomagnetic storms can deform the magnetosphere, allowing energetic particles to reach the surface.