The Impact of Solar Storms on Train Safety: Glitching Railroad Signals

close-up‌ view of the sun from a nasa satellite, showing an eruption originating on our storms left limb.

Check out⁢ this full-disk view ⁢of the sun as it unleashed‌ a major X1.1 class solar flare from an active sunspot​ cluster ‌on April 17, 2022. This view was taken by NASA’s Solar Dynamics Observatory.
(Image credit: NASA/SDO and the AIA, EVE, and HMI science teams)

Safer train travel​ requires tracking solar storms, a new study urges.

Powerful ⁢eruptions from the sun could cause accidents during peak train-travel times by interfering with electrical signaling stations, potentially switching railroad indicators from red (stop) to green (go), according to ⁣the research.

“This is⁣ obviously very⁤ significant from a safety perspective,” ⁣study lead ​author Cameron Patterson, a physics researcher at ‌Lancaster University​ in England, said in a statement on Monday (Dec. 11). “We found that space weather events, capable of triggering faults in these track circuits, are expected in the U.K. every ⁤few decades.”

Related:‌ The⁣ worst solar storms⁢ in history

Risks to railways and other infrastructure may⁣ be particularly high when the ‌sun ⁢reaches a peak in its 11-year‍ activity cycle, as ‍it is doing now. Electrical ⁤currents on ⁢the sun can twist and⁢ snap, causing particle⁣ ejections that travel along Earth’s magnetic⁢ lines. This activity may induce ​auroras and, if particularly strong, interference to radio or ‌electrical equipment.

The study modeled⁢ two United Kingdom railroad routes via computer: the Preston ‍to Lancaster section‌ of the West Coast Main Line, and the Glasgow to⁤ Edinburgh line. ⁣(These tracks are among those that ⁤use 50,000 signaling track circuits controlled by electricity between‍ rails.)

While⁢ the ‌U.K. was the focus ⁢of ‍the study, the researchers ‌point out ⁤that other worldwide jurisdictions ⁤have been ⁣greatly impacted by past solar storms. Examples​ include power outages in the ⁤Canadian province of Quebec in 1989​ and the Swedish city ‌of Malmo in 2003, each of which​ affected millions of people.

Further back in‍ history, the famous “Carrington Event” of ‌1859 disrupted telegraph lines and railway signals around the world.⁤

Signal switching may not necessarily cause an issue. If a solar storm flips⁢ a green signal to red, for example, it would just make a​ train under motion ​come to ​a stop. What would ⁣be worse, however, is if the signal switches from red to ⁣green — implying it is safe⁢ to go when⁤ in reality it is not.

Worse, the study suggests that “wrong side” failures (the ones that​ encourage ‍stopped trains to continue) would⁢ happen at a ‌lower⁤ geoelectric field strength. In ⁢other words, the ⁢researchers say, a weaker storm from the sun could induce these “wrong side” situations every few decades.

The European Space Agency,‌ NASA and many other entities keep a close eye on the sun’s‍ activity ‍for exactly this reason. ⁣They ⁢use a⁣ network of satellites and local⁤ alerts⁤ to advise‌ of potential impacts​ to radio communications.

“Other industries — such as aviation, electricity generation and transmission, and⁤ the space ⁣sector — are considering the risks to their operations,

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