Keypoints:
- Sunspot number is now as high as it has been for over 20 years.
- The space industry has changed significantly since 2002.
- Awareness of intense space weather needs to increase.
The last time the sunspot number was higher than it is now, SpaceX was a
6-month-old company, Rocket Lab was still 4 years from being founded,
and the first standardized CubeSats were still one year from being
launched. This was September 2002, when the monthly sunspot number was
188. Less than 100 spacecraft were launched in that year and Nokia was
still the most popular cellphone brand. Space Weather was in the
process of being launched after the success of the 2001 AGU Monograph on
Space Weather (doi:10.1002/9781118668351).
The monthly mean sunspot number has been 163 and 159 for the last two
months (2023 June-July). This is larger than the double peak of solar
cycle 24 (146 in February 2014 and 139 in November 2011) and brings us
back to the sunspot level of solar cycle 23.
In 2022, there were close to 200 rockets that launched into orbit, with
more than 60 from SpaceX. There are now about 8700 active satellites,
including over 4000 (and counting) active Starlink satellites.
The first Starlink launch occurred in 2019 during the last solar
minimum. From 2016 to 2021, the sunspot number was below 60,
representing weak to very weak solar activity. New space companies have
almost exclusively operated during weak geomagnetic conditions, with
unusually low thermospheric densities, very rare extreme solar energetic
particle events and extreme X-ray flares. The development and usability
of very low Earth orbits (VLEO) below 400 km, where the atmospheric drag
is significantly higher and atomic oxygen is a key element, are strongly
affected by changes in atmospheric densities. Governmental space
agencies and private companies have made lunar missions a priority over
the coming years. This will result in a dramatic increase in technology
and human presence in cislunar space – a region that largely lies
outside of the Earth’s magnetosphere’s protection from solar and cosmic
ray radiation. So far, while the sunspot number of solar cycle 25 is
matching up to that in the ascending phase of solar cycle 23 and the
thermospheric temperature is reaching a 20-year high, the number of
large flares, energetic particle events and large geomagnetic storms are
still lagging behind. If this were to continue, the disconnect between
the sunspot number and solar eruptive events would have to be
investigated by the scientific community, but this might provide a
respite to space companies. If large flares, eruptions and energetic
particle events increase significantly, an even closer attention to
space weather by new space companies might be warranted. We note,
however that (i) not all extreme events occur during large solar cycles
(e.g., see Reyes et al., 2021,
10.1029/2021SW002766),
(ii) not all extreme or large events occur during the maximum of solar
cycle (e.g., see the Sep 2017 geomagnetic storm at a time when sunspot
number was below 50), (iii) space weather impact do not correlate
one-on-one with extreme drivers, it varies depending on the impact
(radiation, geomagnetically induced currents, etc.) and is still an
active area of research.
The consequences of increased solar activity are well known and well
documented: e.g., increased thermospheric temperature and density (and
therefore atmospheric drag), first due to the higher solar EUV fluxes
but also due to flares and geomagnetic storms, higher probability of
large radiation events, etc. It appears, however, that many space
companies, operating in LEO, have been caught unaware of the recent
increase in solar activity. While the 2022 February SpaceX event is an
often-cited example (Hapgood et al., 2022), the long-term effects of
enhanced drag on LEO constellations, the need for either higher initial
altitudes, more adaptive mission planning or better performing
propulsion systems for these constellations, could have more important
economical consequences. This return to a more “normal” level of solar
activity is also likely to impact other industries similarly used to
more benign conditions. Space Weather was founded to serve as a
journal, not only for scientific researchers but also for space and
operations engineers while reaching out to policy makers (Lanzerotti,
2003;
doi.org/10.1029/2003SW000024).
We hope that the journal is able to fulfill this role as the number of
companies potentially affected by space weather grows.