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Carrington- and Tunguska events are interesting because they are unique.

"The Carrington Event of 1859, a massive solar storm, was recently studied through radiocarbon concentrations in tree rings, revealing new insights into solar activity and its effects on Earth. (Artist’s concept.) Credit: SciTechDaily.com" (ScitechDaily, Solar Storm Secrets Unveiled: Tree Ring Evidence From the 1859 Carrington Event)


The Carrington event of 1859 was the strongest magnetic storm in history.  


Researchers at the University of Helsinki research the extraordinarily strong magnetic, or solar storm from the year 1859. The case called Carrington Event was the most powerful solar storm in history. And the main question is what caused that corona mass eruption (CME)? Researchers try to find remnants of those particles from the trees of Finnish Lappland. And maybe they found an answer: what caused that unique, extraordinarily strong magnetic storm?

Was it some kind of electromagnetic burst? Or was it some kind of antimatter particle? And why did that event happen only once? 



The Carrington Event was one of the most powerful solar storms in history. The reason for that phenomenon is a mystery. The reason for those extraordinarily bright northern lights in the year 1859 is suspected caused by the Corona mass eruption (CME) that impacted Earth's magnetic field. But the thing that caused this CME effect is a mystery. Sometimes. Some researchers think that GRB (Gamma-Ray Burst) or some other high-energy radiation impulse or things like antimatter impact the sun in that year. 

The thing that made the Carrington event interesting is that it happened only once. There is no evidence of such kind of eruption after that day. The astronomer named Carrington reported that before those northern lights, he saw the extraordinarily bright flare. And that thing is one of the things that support the theory of high-energy wave-impact on the Sun. The thing that made this event interesting is that it happened only once. 




Tunguska Event on 30 June 1908. 


The Tunguska event in 1908 was one of the most mysterious explosions in history. The reason for that explosion was probably some kind of meteorite that detonated in the atmosphere. The Tunguska event is still today visible in the forest. The ground zero is still clean from trees. And the question is why that meteorite detonated in the atmosphere. Nobody saw that explosion. 

Because it happened a long way from villages and cities. One explanation for why that meteorite left no trace is that it was ice, covered by cosmic dust. That dust could isolate that methane or some other non-water ice. When that meteorite traveled to the atmosphere the dust protected the ice from the heat. And when dust disappeared that ice, whose temperature was less than -100 degrees impacted with heat that was tens of thousands of degrees. 



That suddenly vaporized this ice, and then the expanding steam pushed air away forming a vacuum. Then pressure made that bubble fall. Impacting air molecules formed an intensive heat that released energy. That is calculated over 3-30 mt. TNT. The event caused about three human victims. And an event destroyed large forest areas. 



Some eyewitnesses said that the fireball changed its route. And the dusty ice meteorite can explain that thing. The dust can burn off asymmetrically which causes a change in the aerodynamic form of that meteorite. 

In some other versions, the meteorite was magnesite. There could trapped antimatter in that hypothetical meteorite. When that meteorite burned away the antimatter touched air. And then it detonated causing a huge explosion. The fact is that nobody knows what exploded over the Inhabitat tundra in Siberia on that day, 30 June 1908. 


https://scitechdaily.com/solar-storm-secrets-unveiled-tree-ring-evidence-from-the-1859-carrington-event/


https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tunguska_event

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