Wednesday, May 14, 2025

  SPACE/COSMOS

Enhanced activity in the upper atmosphere of Sporadic E layers during the 2024 Mother’s Day super geomagnetic storm



New study reveals the impact of the Mother’s Day geomagnetic storm on the Sporadic E layers that could disrupt radio communications and navigation systems




Kyushu University

Visualization of Earth’s magnetosphere being hit by the Mother’s Day geomagnetic storm 

image: 

A screen shot from NASA’s Scientific Visualization Studio that visualizes the Earth's magnetosphere being hit by a geomagnetic storm that happened throughout May 10-11, 2024. The powerful geomagnetic storm resulted in auroras being viewed in relatively low latitude areas around the globe. Kyushu University researchers found that sporadic Es were also enhanced during these storms.

view more 

Credit: NASA's Scientific Visualization Studio and NASA DRIVE Science Center for Geospace Storms https://svs.gsfc.nasa.gov/5435.




Fukuoka, Japan—In a paper published in Geophysical Research Lettersresearchers from Kyushu University report on the activity of sporadic E layers—about 90-120 km above sea level—during the Mother’s Day geomagnetic storm. The team found that the E layers were significantly enhanced during the recovery phase of the geomagnetic storm. Sporadic E layer, as the name suggests, is a phenomenon in which thin—about 1-5 km thick—but dense patches of ionized metals suddenly appear in the E layer of the ionosphere.

Moreover, the team found that these series of sporadic E layers occurred mainly over Southeast Asia, Australia, the South Pacific, and the East Pacific. They also observed a propagation characteristic of the phenomenon wherein the clouds were first detected around high latitude areas of the poles and then detected successively in lower latitude areas over time.

“When studying the Mother’s Day geomagnetic storm, many researchers looked at what happened in the F layer of the ionosphere. It is about 150-500 km above sea level and is where the most ionization occurs,” explains Professor Huixin Liu of Kyushu University’s Faculty of Science, who led the study. “The sporadic E layer hasn’t been studied very much during the storm because it appeared unaffected by solar storms. But we wanted to see if something as powerful as the Mother’s Day geomagnetic storm did anything to the E layer. What we found was very interesting.”

To track sporadic Es across the globe the team collected data both from the ground, using 37 ground-based radars called ionosodes, and from space, using the COSMiC-2 satellite network. This vast amount of data gave the researchers an unprecedented global map of sporadic Es activity during and after the solar storm.

“This large amount of data was critical for both detecting the presence of sporadic Es and tracking where they formed as time went by,” continues Liu. “In our analysis, we found that sporadic Es formed after the main phase of the solar storm, during what we call the recovery phase. Sporadic Es were also detected first in the higher latitude regions, around the Earth’s poles. They were then detected gradually in lower latitudes over time. This propagation characteristic from high to low latitudes suggests that sporadic E layers are most likely caused by the disturbed neutral winds in the E region.”

Understanding the activity of the E layer is vital due to its potential to disrupt radio communications in the HF and VHF bands. The research team hopes that their new findings will lead to better insights on Es layer activity and how such unique phenomena are created in the ionosphere.

“We now know that sporadic Es enhance during the recovery phase of a solar storm, so perhaps we can forecast more accurately sporadic Es using the propagation characteristics found in our study and mitigate potential communication disruptions,” concludes Liu. “We also plan to re-examine the data from other solar storms to see if we can better understand these phenomena.”

###

For more information about this research, see "Sporadic-E Layer Responses to Super Geomagnetic Storm 10–12 May 2024," Lihui Qiu, Huixin Liu, Geophysical Research Letters https://doi.org/10.1029/2025GL115154

About Kyushu University 
Founded in 1911, Kyushu University is one of Japan's leading research-oriented institutes of higher education, consistently ranking as one of the top ten Japanese universities in the Times Higher Education World University Rankings and the QS World Rankings. The university is one of the seven national universities in Japan, located in Fukuoka, on the island of Kyushu—the most southwestern of Japan’s four main islands with a population and land size slightly larger than Belgium. Kyushu U’s multiple campuses—home to around 19,000 students and 8000 faculty and staff—are located around Fukuoka City, a coastal metropolis that is frequently ranked among the world's most livable cities and historically known as Japan's gateway to Asia. Through its VISION 2030, Kyushu U will “drive social change with integrative knowledge.” By fusing the spectrum of knowledge, from the humanities and arts to engineering and medical sciences, Kyushu U will strengthen its research in the key areas of decarbonization, medicine and health, and environment and food, to tackle society’s most pressing issues.

Scientists precisely simulate turbulence in the Galaxy — it doesn’t behave like they thought



Turbulence on the Galactic Scales



Princeton University

Galaxy & Turbulence Simulation Composite 

image: 

This composite image combines observations from the NASA/ESA/CSA James Webb Space Telescope of the Phantom Galaxy (M74) with a high-resolution simulation of galactic turbulence. The simulation from this study — zoomed into a small patch of the galaxy’s interstellar medium — reveals extremely high-resolution chaotic motions of plasma that regulate star formation, structure formation, and the magnetic field across the galactic scales. 

An international team of scientists have developed the world’s largest-ever simulations of magnetized turbulence and measured — with unprecedented precision — how turbulent energy moves across a vast range of scales. By simulating galactic-type turbulence in exquisite detail, the researchers found significant departures from the models that have guided astrophysical theory for decades.  The findings could reshape how scientists understand the turbulent structure of the Galaxy, the transport of high-energy particles, and even the birth of stars. In practical terms, understanding and properly modeling turbulence and the production of highly energetic particles can shed light on how to safely navigate space, at a time when commercial space flight is growing and attracting the interest of civilians and celebrities alike.

 

view more 

Credit: Credit: ESA/Webb, NASA & CSA, J. Lee and the PHANGS-JWST Team; Acknowledgement: J. Schmidt; Simulation: J. Beattie.





From the ocean’s rolling swells to the bumpy ride of a jetliner, turbulence is everywhere. It breaks large waves into smaller ones, cascading energy across scales. It is ubitquitous throughout our Galaxy and the broader Universe, shaping the behavior of plasma, stars, and magnetic fields. Yet despite its ubiquity, turbulence remains one of the greatest unsolved problems in physics.

Now, by developing the world’s largest-ever simulations of magnetized turbulence, an international team of scientists has measured — with unprecedented precision — how turbulent energy moves across a vast range of scales. The result: it doesn’t match with long-standing theories.

James Beattie, a postdoctoral researcher at Princeton University's Department of Astrophysical Sciences and a fellow at the Canadian Institute for Theoretical Astrophysics at University of Toronto, led the study along with Amitava Bhattacharjee of Princeton, and colleagues at the Australian National University, Heidelberg University and the Leibniz Supercomputing Center.

By simulating galactic-type turbulence in exquisite detail, the researchers found significant departures from the models that have guided astrophysical theory for decades. The team explicitly observed that magnetic fields alter the way energy cascades through the space between stars in our Galaxy — known as the interstellar medium — suppressing small-scale motions and enhancing certain wave-like disturbances known as AlfvĆ©n waves. The findings could reshape how scientists understand the turbulent structure of the Galaxy, the transport of high-energy particles, and even the turbulent birth of stars.

In practical terms, understanding and properly modeling turbulence and the production of highly energetic particles can shed light on how to safely navigate space, at a time when commercial space flight is growing and attracting the interest of civilians and celebrities alike.

‘‘The research has implications for predicting and monitoring space weather to better understand the plasma environment around satellites and future space missions, and also the acceleration of highly energetic particles, which damage everything, and could endanger human beings in space,” said Bhattacharjee, a co-author on the new paper and Professor of Astrophysical Sciences at Princeton.

“A lot of these fundamental plasma turbulence questions are objects of missions now launched by NASA and have implications for understanding the origin of cosmic magnetic fields. Simulations like these would give us insights into how to interpret satellite and ground-based measurements,” said Bhattacharjee.

Simulating Turbulence like Never Before

There is still no complete mathematical framework for predicting how energy moves from large to small scales: across oceans, in the atmosphere, or through the plasma and dust between stars. In space, the problem is even more complex than on Earth due to magnetization, requiring vast computational resources to model. The team’s work relied on the equivalent of 140,000 computers running in parallel. 

“To put these massive simulations into perspective: if we had started one on a single laptop when humans first domesticated animals, it would just be finishing now,” said Beattie. “Luckily, utilizing the amazing resources from the Leibniz Supercomputing Centre, we can distribute the workload across thousands of computers to accelerate the calculations.”

“We are a step closer to uncovering the true nature of astrophysical and space turbulence, from chaotic plasma near Earth to the vast motions within our Galaxy and beyond,” said Beattie, “The dream is to discover universal features in turbulence across the Universe, and we’ll continue pushing the limits of the next-generation of simulations to test that idea.”

The new work will be published in the journal Nature Astronomy on May 13, 2025. In addition to Beattie and Bhattacharjee, co-authors include Christoph Federrath of the Australian National University, Ralf S. Klessen of Heidelberg University, and Salvatore Cielo of the Leibniz Supercomputing Center of the Bavarian Academy of Sciences and Humanities.


The SuperMUC-NG supercomputer at the Leibniz Supercomputing Centre (LRZ) in Munich is one of Europe’s most powerful computing systems. It supports cutting-edge research in fields like astrophysics, life sciences, and artificial intelligence by enabling massive-scale simulations and data processing.

The supercomputers were used to develop the world's largest simulations of magnetized turbulence. The team’s work relied on the equivalent of 140,000 computers running in parallel, enabled by the Leibniz Supercomputing Centre’s supercomputer, totaling more than 80 million computing hours from start to finish. There is still no complete mathematical framework for predicting how energy moves from large to small scales — across oceans, in the atmosphere, or through  the plasma and dust between the stars. In space, the problem is even more complex than on Earth due to magnetization, requiring these computational resources to model. 

Credit

Image credit: F. Lƶchner / LRZ

A snapshot of the chaotic dance between plasma and magnetic fields in the world’s largest simulation of magnetized turbulence — the type of turbulence found throughout our Galaxy. The work includes the largest and most precise simulations ever made of galactic turbulence. 

This 2D slice of the world's largest turbulence simulation reveals the fractal structure of the density, shown in yellow, black and red, and magnetic field, shown in white.


The chaotic structure of the turbulent magnetic field and velocity in the world’s largest magnetized turbulence simulation, a model for plasma motion within our Galaxy.

Credit

James Beattie


ENTROPY

Why so many microbes fail to grow in the lab


New study reveals how a network of mutual dependencies shapes microbial diversity


University of Oldenburg





Microbial ecosystems – for example in the seawater, the soil or in the human gut – are astonishingly diverse, but researchers often struggle to reproduce this diversity in the lab: Many microorganisms die when attempts are made to cultivate them. A new study from researchers at the Helmholtz Institute for Functional Marine Biodiversity at the University of Oldenburg (HIFMB), Germany, offers fresh insights into this longstanding puzzle, suggesting that that the survival of microbes does not depend solely on the needs of individual microbes but on a hidden web of relationships that can be caused to collapse by even small structural changes.

In work published in the journal PNAS, biodiversity experts Dr Thomas Clegg and Prof. Dr Thilo Gross take a simplified view of microbial communities as a network based on cross-feeding, the exchange of metabolic by-products between populations. Each species needs nutrients and at the same time releases substances that are needed as food by others. Clegg and Gross modelled this complex network taking a novel approach. They used tools from network theory – a mathematical method developed in physics to understand the behaviour of complex systems.

The result of the analysis: in the model, the loss of individual populations can cause the entire network to collapse, with the microbial community transitioning abruptly to a state of lower diversity. "These collapses act as tipping points, resembling blackouts in power grids or supply chain breakdowns seen during the COVID-19 pandemic," explains lead author Clegg.

Trying to grow a microbial community in the laboratory is an example of such a perturbation according to the researchers: For example, if not all members of a natural microbial community are included in a sample, they will be missing as producers of metabolic products that are vital for other species. "By focusing on the structure of these interactions, the study offers new insight into why diversity is so hard to maintain in a lab setting," explains Thilo Gross.

Although researchers have long suspected that the dependencies between microbes play a key role in our ability to grow them, this study is the first to show how this works across whole communities. The findings offer a new perspective on microbial resilience, highlighting how even in resource rich environments like lab cultures, communities can fail if the networks of relationships are disrupted. Crucially the model also reveals that once a community collapses, recovery can be difficult, even when resources are reintroduced. “It’s not just about what individual microbes need, but who they depend on,” says lead author Dr. Tom Clegg “the whole community thrives, or collapses, together”.