Northern Lights Watch UK

Planetary K-Index & Geomagnetic Storms explained


oooo

The Kp-index (Kp 0 – Kp 9) is a scale used to characterise the magnitude of geomagnetic disturbances. A geomagnetic storm starts at Kp5 after which the G-scale (G1 – G5) is also used.

oooo

Magnetometers (Kp-index)
The colour-coded system has four levels magnetometers to automatically detect
when it is likely that aurora can be seen from the UK.

O
Green alert:
no significant activity
(small influx of particles due to some reconnections mostly at the magnetotail.)
O
Geomagnetic Latitudes
Kp 0 – quiet (weak & slow)
Kp 1 – quiet (weak & slow)
Kp 2 – Unsettled
(moderate)
Kp 3 – Unsettled (substorms possible)
O
Aurora is unlikely to be visible by eye or camera from anywhere in the UK.
O
O
Yellow alert:
minor geomagnetic activity
(Coronal hole sending fast winds after days / enhanced solar wind.)
Geomagnetic Latitudes
Kp 4 – active (multiple substorms)
(High latitudes – active auroral display)
(Low latitudes – weak aurora display)
O
It is likely that aurora will be visible by eye and camera from anywhere in the UK.
O
O
Amber alert:
possible aurora
(Coronal hole sending fast winds or Coronal Mass Ejections (CME) / enhanced solar wind.)
O
Geomagnetic Latitudes
Kp 5 (G1) – minor storm
(High latitudes – more active auroral)
(Low latitudes – auroral display likely)
Kp 6 (G2) – minor storm
(High latitudes – strong auroral display)
(Low latitudes – auroral display very likely)
O
Aurora is likely to be visible by eye from Scotland, northern England and Northern Ireland; possibly visible from elsewhere in the UK. Photographs of aurora are likely from anywhere in the UK.
O
O
Red alert:
aurora likely
(Large CME caused by solar storms or flares / very enhanced solar wind with strong shock wave.)
O
Geomagnetic Latitudes
Kp 7 (G3) – strong storm

Kp 8 (G4) – severe storm
Kp 9 (G5) – extreme storm
(High latitudes – exteremly strong auroral)
(Low latitudes – strong auroral exteremly)
O
It is likely that aurora will be visible by eye and camera from anywhere in the UK.
O

oooo


oooo

Five categories measure Geomagnetic Storms (G1 – G5)
While the storms create a beautiful aurora, they also can disrupt navigation systems such as the Global Navigation Satellite System (GNSS) and create harmful geomagnetic induced currents (GICs) in the power grid and pipelines. An increase in the geomagnetic disturbance index called Kp is observed.

oooo

Geomagnetic storm:
G1 (minor)
G1 storms may trigger weak power grid fluctuations and have some minor impacts on satellite operations.
O
Geomagnetic storm:
G2 (moderate)
To suggest high-latitude power systems may experience voltage alarms while long-duration G2 storms may cause transformer damage. HF radio propagation may also fade at higher latitudes.
O
Geomagnetic storm:
G3 (strong)
Once storm levels reach G3, intermittent satellite navigation and low-frequency radio navigation problems may occur, and HF radio may be intermittent. Voltage corrections may be needed on power systems, and false alarms may be triggered on some protection devices.
O
Geomagnetic storm:
G4 (severe)
Power system administrators may be feeling like their hands are getting full as there could be widespread voltage control issues. Satellite and space operations may see surface charging and tracking issues. 
O
Geomagnetic storm:
G5 (extreme)
Luckily, storm levels of this magnitude are relatively rare. Still, when they occur, power systems may see widespread voltage control problems and some grid systems may experience complete collapse or blackouts, and transformers may suffer damage.

oooo

Back

oooo

oooo

Comments are closed.