SpaceX Just Punched a Hole in the Ionosphere

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PinkDiamond
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SpaceX Just Punched a Hole in the Ionosphere

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From Spaceweather.com, did any of y'all see this? 8-)

SpaceX Just Punched a Hole in the Ionosphere
SPACEX PUNCHED A HOLE IN THE IONOSPHERE: This week, a Falcon 9 rocket launched from Vandenberg Space Force Base did something unexpected. It punched a hole in the ionosphere, creating an aurora-like display of red lights over the US Southwest. This phenomenon is becoming increasingly common as launch rates hit record highs. Full story @ Spaceweather.com.

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"After the rocket passed overhead, a red fluorescent glow expanded southward and crossed over the Milky Way," says Perez. "It was visible for almost 20 minutes."

The red glow is a sign that the rocket punched a hole in the ionosphere--something SpaceX and others have been doing for years. One famous example occured on August 25, 2017, when a Falcon 9 rocket carrying Taiwan’s FORMOSAT-5 satellite created a hole four times bigger than the state of California. On June 19, 2022, another Falcon 9 punched a hole over the east coast of the USA, sparking a display of red lights from New York to the Carolinas that many observers mistook for aurora borealis.

"This is a well studied phenomenon when rockets are burning their engines 200 to 300 km above Earth's surface," explains space physicist Jeff Baumgardner of Boston University. "The red glow appears when exhaust gasses from the rocket's 2nd stage cause the ionosphere to recombine quickly."

Rocket engines spray water (H2O) and carbon dioxide (CO2) into the ionosphere, quenching local ionization by as much as 70%. A complicated series of charge exchange reactions between oxygen ions (O+) and molecules from the rocket exhaust produce photons at a wavelength of 6300 Å--the same color as red auroras.

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Above: Electron density maps show a hole in the ionosphere formed by a SpaceX rocket in 2017. [more]

"I reviewed footage from the July 19th launch," says Baumgardner. "It shows the second stage engine burning at 286 km near the ionosphere's F-region peak for that time of day. So, it is quite possible that an ionospheric 'hole' was made."

Once rare, ionospheric "punch holes" are increasingly common with record numbers of rocket launches led by SpaceX sending Starlink satellites to low-Earth orbit. Ham radio operators may notice them when shortwave signals fail to skip over the horizon, shooting through holes instead of bouncing back to Earth. Sudden GPS errors can also result from the anomalies. These effects may be troublesome, but they are shortlived; re-ionization occurs as soon as the sun comes up again.

Readers, did you see a red glow from this week's SpaceX launch? Submit your photos here.
https://spaceweather.com/
PinkDiamond
ISG Registered Gemologist


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