日本地球惑星科学連合2014年大会

講演情報

インターナショナルセッション(口頭発表)

セッション記号 P (宇宙惑星科学) » P-EM 太陽地球系科学・宇宙電磁気学・宇宙環境

[P-EM08_2PM2] Space Weather and Space Climate

2014年5月2日(金) 16:15 〜 17:00 411 (4F)

コンビーナ:*片岡 龍峰(国立極地研究所)、海老原 祐輔(京都大学生存圏研究所)、草野 完也(名古屋大学太陽地球環境研究所)、清水 敏文(宇宙航空研究開発機構宇宙科学研究所)、三好 由純(名古屋大学太陽地球環境研究所)、浅井 歩(京都大学宇宙総合学研究ユニット)、佐藤 達彦(日本原子力研究開発機構)、陣 英克(情報通信研究機構)、伊藤 公紀(横浜国立大学大学院工学研究院)、宮原 ひろ子(武蔵野美術大学造形学部)、座長:片岡 龍峰(国立極地研究所)

16:15 〜 16:30

[PEM08-28] The Impacts of Space Weather on Society and the Economy

*Baker Daniel N.1 (1.University of Colorado Boulder)

キーワード:Space weather, Electric power grids, Radiation hazards, Infrastructure interdependencies, Socioeconomic impact of severe space weather

This presentation describes possible extreme space weather impacts and their economic and societal costs. Modern society depends heavily on a variety of technologies that are vulnerable to the effects of intense geomagnetic storms and solar energetic particle (SEP) events. Strong currents flowing in the ionosphere can disrupt and damage Earth-based electric power grids and contribute to the accelerated corrosion of oil and gas pipelines. Magnetic storm-driven ionospheric disturbances interfere with high-frequency radio communications and navigation signals from Global Positioning System (GPS) satellites. Exposure of spacecraft to solar particles and radiation belt enhancements can cause temporary operational anomalies, damage critical electronics, degrade solar arrays, and blind optical systems such as imagers and star trackers. Moreover, intense SEP events present a significant radiation hazard for astronauts during the high-latitude segment of the International Space Station (ISS) orbit as well as for future human explorers of the Moon and Mars. In addition to such direct effects as spacecraft anomalies or power grid outages, a thorough assessment of the impact of severe space weather events on present-day society must include the collateral effects of space-weather-driven technology failures. For example, polar cap absorption events due to solar particles can degrade—and, during severe events, completely black out—radio communications along transpolar aviation routes, requiring aircraft flying these routes to be diverted to lower latitudes. This can add considerable cost to the airlines and can greatly inconvenience passengers. Modern technological society is characterized by a complex set of interdependencies among its critical infrastructures. A complete picture of the socioeconomic impact of severe space weather must include both direct as well as collateral effects of space-weather-driven technology failures on dependent infrastructures and services.