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18893


Date: November 29, 2023 at 06:58:19
From: Redhart, [DNS_Address]
Subject: SpaceX rockets tearing blood-red holes in sky--scientists concerned

URL: https://www.livescience.com/space/space-exploration/spacex-rockets-keep-tearing-blood-red-atmospheric-holes-in-the-sky-and-scientists-are-concerned


SpaceX rockets keep tearing blood-red 'atmospheric
holes' in the sky, and scientists are concerned
News
By Harry Baker published about 21 hours ago

Astronomers have discovered a new type of "aurora"
created by falling SpaceX rocket boosters that punch
temporary holes in the ionosphere. Experts are
concerned that these blood-red light shows could be
causing unknown problems for astronomy and
communication.

De-orbiting SpaceX rockets are smashing temporary holes
in the upper atmosphere, creating bright blobs of light
in the sky. Now, scientists have warned that these
"SpaceX auroras," which look like glowing red orbs of
light, could be causing unrecognized problems — though
they are not a threat to the environment or life on
Earth.

Researchers have known for decades that launching
rockets into space can punch holes in the upper
ionosphere — the part of the atmosphere between 50 and
400 miles (80 and 644 kilometers) above Earth's surface
where gas is ionized, or stripped of electrons. These
"ionospheric holes" can excite gas molecules in this
part of the atmosphere and trigger vibrant streaks of
red, aurora-like light.

For example, in July, a SpaceX Falcon 9 rocket, which
was carrying Starlink satellites into orbit, ripped
open a hole above Arizona that made the sky bleed. And,
in September, a U.S. Space Force rocket accidentally
punched an ionospheric hole above California, which
created a faint red glow.

Now, astronomers at the McDonald Observatory in Texas
have spotted similar but unique red lights appearing
long after SpaceX's Falcon 9 rockets have left Earth's
atmosphere. These lights, which are smaller and more
spherical than the long streaks created by launching
rockets, are the result of ionospheric holes carved out
by the rockets' secondary boosters as they fall back to
Earth after detaching from the rockets,
Spaceweather.com reported.

Astronomers spotted the first of these SpaceX auroras
above the observatory in February, and now are seeing
"2 to 5 of them each month," Stephen Hummel, an
astronomer and outreach program coordinator at McDonald
Observatory, told Spaceweather.com. The red orbs are
"very bright" and "easily visible with the naked eye,"
he added.

Ascending rockets and de-orbiting boosters both trigger
ionospheric holes by releasing fuel into the
ionosphere, which causes ionized oxygen atoms to
recombine, or turn back into regular gas molecules.

This transformation excites the molecules and causes
them to release red light, similar to when the gas is
excited by solar radiation during traditional auroral
displays. This essentially creates a hole in the
surrounding plasma, or ionized gas. But the recombined
molecules are are reionized, which closes up the holes
within 10 to 20 minutes.

SpaceX's de-orbiting boosters release fuel during short
burns in order to manouver the falling debris to touch
down in the southern Atlantic Ocean instead of crashing
onto land. The resulting holes typically form above the
south-central U.S. around 90 minutes after launch at an
altitude of about 185 miles (300 km), according to
Spaceweather.com. These holes are smaller and more
circular than the holes torn open by launching rockets,
so the resulting lights are more spherical and do not
linger as long. But they are appearing more frequently.

Just like the larger light shows, the ionospheric holes
pose no danger to life on Earth's surface. However,
"their impact on astronomical science is still being
evaluated," Hummel said. As a result, it is "a growing
area of attention" among researchers, he added.

Changes to the ionosphere can also disrupt shortwave
radio communication and interfere with GPS signals,
according to Spaceweather.com.

Studying these holes could also help scientists learn
more about the ionosphere.

"The ionospheric density is different night to night,
so we can learn something about the efficiency of the
[ionosphere's] chemistry by observing many events,"
Jeffrey Baumgardner, a physicist at Boston University,
told Spaceweather.com.

The red blobs are not the only light shows created by
SpaceX rockets. The company's rocket boosters spin and
dump their leftover fuel in space before they de-orbit,
which creates a cloud of tiny ice crystals. These
crystals can occasionally reflect sunlight back toward
Earth, and the illuminated fuel creates bright spirals
in the night sky, known as "SpaceX spirals."

There have already been two major SpaceX spirals this
year: The first was in January, which was spotted
forming above Mauna Kea in Hawaii, and the second
occurred in April, which shone during a traditional
auroral display in Alaska.

The number of SpaceX launches is rapidly increasing so
the auroras and spirals are both likely to become more
common in the future.


Responses:
[18894]


18894


Date: November 29, 2023 at 09:21:26
From: ryan, [DNS_Address]
Subject: Re: SpaceX rockets tearing blood-red holes in sky--scientists...


a wise woman once told me that every time a rocket goes into space, it bores a hole though our atmosphere and drags a large volume of our atmosphere into space...poof... gone...stupid humans...


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