The ground is in danger...Sun to 'Spat Carthy'
Astronomers warned about the sun entering the "catastrophic spat" period, which causes it to be blocked and entered the lower stage of solar energy, which may cause freezing of weather and earthquakes. Experts believe we are about to enter the deepest period of the ever-recorded "decline" of sunlight, with the sunspots actually disappearing, according to the British newspaper the Sun.
As astronomer Tony Phillips has said, “the minimum solar energy has already happened, and it is deep. The Sun's magnetic field is weak, allowing additional cosmic rays in the solar system," he said. "Excessive cosmic rays pose a health hazard for astronauts and passengers in polar air, affect electrochemistry in Earth's upper atmosphere, and may help cause lightning." NASA scientists fear that it may be a repetition of the phenomenon of "Delton Minimam", that took place between 1790 and 1830, leading to periods of severe cold, loss of crops, famine and strong volcanic eruptions. Temperatures have fallen by up to 2°C over 20 years, destroying world food production.
The second largest volcanic eruption
On April 10, 1815, Indonesia's second largest volcanic eruption in 2000 occurred on Mount Tampura, killing at least 71,000 people, and also leading to the so-called year without summer in 1816, when snow fell in July. So far this year, the Sun was "empty" with no sunspots 76% of the time, a rate that was exceeded once in space age last year, when 77% were empty.
"A little sleepy"
A previous study revealed that the Sun, though the most important source of energy for life on Earth, is "a little sleepy" compared to the other stars in the universe. Astronomers from the Max Planck Institute in Germany compared the Sun to hundreds of similar stars, as using data from NASA's Kepler Space Telescope, researchers selected stars with surface temperature, age, and sunlike orbits in the galaxy of the two, the dans of the dans, the dwarf of the dwarf. The results showed that the sun is very weak compared to most other stars by about 5 times. "We were surprised that most Sun-like stars are much more active than the Sun," said Alexander Shapiro, of Max Planck Institute. It is not clear, according to researchers, whether the Sun is "going through a quiet period" for 9,000 years or is less bright than other similar stars.
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