Beautiful and Dangerous: Auroras and Potential Risks
12 November 2025

Beautiful and Dangerous: Auroras and Potential Risks

Discursive Podcast

About

When we witness the Northern Lights dancing across the sky, we're seeing the visible aftermath of explosions that release more energy than billions of nuclear bombs. The Sun fuses 600 million tons of hydrogen into helium every second, occasionally blasting billions of tons of charged particles toward Earth in Coronal Mass Ejections that can cross 93 million miles in as little as 15-18 hours. These cosmic hurricanes create auroras when they funnel through Earth's magnetic field lines and excite atmospheric gases, producing those vivid greens from oxygen and blues and purples from nitrogen.


But this celestial beauty comes with serious risks. The same solar energy that creates stunning auroras can overload our technological infrastructure. The 1989 Quebec blackout left six million people in darkness for nine hours, and researchers estimate a Carrington Event-level storm today could cause $2.6 trillion in global damage. We came terrifyingly close in July 2012 when a massive solar eruption narrowly missed Earth—one that scientists believe was at least as strong as the infamous 1859 event.


In today's tech news, we examine Bluetooth 6.2's protection against sophisticated RF attacks that manipulate signal amplitude to fool proximity systems, YouTube's platform changes forcing yt-dlp to require external JavaScript runtimes, and FFmpeg developers' frustration with Google using AI to find bugs in volunteer-maintained critical infrastructure without adequate funding. We also look at the disappearing art of laptop sticker culture and the Network Time Foundation's funding challenges.

Want to attend a concert dedicated to the Northern Lights?  Come and see me sing.



    Seattle Pro Musica Northern Lights Concert

Links
Main segment

    NOAA Space Weather Prediction Center
    NOAA Scales Explanation (G1-G5)
    NASA Solar Facts
    NASA Aurora Explanation
    SOHO Mission
    DSCOVR Mission
    NASA 2012 Near Miss
    Allianz Geomagnetic Storm Analysis
    Lloyd's Solar Storm Risk Report
    Business Insider Solar Storm Analysis
    Seattle Pro Musica Northern Lights Concert
    Ēriks Ešenvalds Composer Profile
    Oxford University Press Score Notes
    NOAA Planetary K-index
    NOAA GOES Proton Flux
    SpaceWeatherLive

News

    Bluetooth 6.2 Brings Major Security Improvements and Ultra-Low Latency
    Bluetooth Core 6.2 Feature Overview
    Bluetooth Channel Sounding Explained
    Texas Instruments: Secure Ranging with Bluetooth Channel Sounding
    YouTube Forces yt-dlp to Require External JavaScript Runtime
    FFmpeg Developers Tell Google "Fund Us or Stop Sending Bugs"
    Stickertop.art Celebrates the Lost Art of Laptop Personalization
    Network Time Foundation Fundraising
    Solar Storm Causes Northern Lights Visible in Southern U.S.