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The Carrington event, September 1, 1859, astronomer Richard Carrington, he saw a bright flash of light. He's actually a British astronomer. He saw a bright flash of light. And this is coming from a huge sunspot. And what he witnessed led up to the most powerful solar flare in recorded history and was followed by a devastating solar storm. And simulations performed by the European Space Agency have revealed that should another event like that happen, the effects would be much more damaging because of our dependence on technology. The hypothetical scenario used a solar flare five times more powerful than anything this current solar cycle has produced. The eruption would shower Earth with an intense wave of radiation with no warning. Fifteen hours later, another wave of radiation and a gigantic cloud of plasma, or CME, would strike the Earth at 4.4 million miles per hour, 7.1 million kilometers per hour, setting off the Carrington-like event. The flow of energy from the sun would likely cause damage to all of Earth's orbiting satellites. Okay.
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