Doomsday Fear: Could an EMP Throw World into Chaos?
By Douglas Main, Staff Writer |
SOMEWHERE IN THE CAROLINA MOUNTAINS — If a nuclear bomb went off in the
high atmosphere over the United States, it could possibly take out the
electrical grids over most of the country. Likewise, a huge solar flare
could create widespread devastation by knocking out electricity, experts
say.
One family is going to the extreme to prepare for such a contingency,
building a castle here in the Carolina mountains where they could hole
up without electricity and fend for themselves for months or years. The
family is the subject of a new show on the National Geographic Channel
called "Doomsday Castle," which premiers tonight (Aug. 13) at 10 o'clock ET.
But how likely is such a scenario? The nuke scenario
It depends on whom you ask. One way to create a widespread and damaging
electromagnetic pulse (EMP) would be to detonate a large nuclear weapon
over the central United States, at an altitude of 25 miles to 500 miles
(40 kilometers to 800 kilometers), according to the Commission to
Assess the Threat to the U.S. from EMP Attack, in testimony before the
House Armed Services Committee in July 2008. At this height, a nuclear
blast could interact with the ionosphere, the shell of electrons and
electrically charged particles surrounding Earth, to create a series of electromagnetic pulses that could reach across a continent, according to the commission. [Photos: Inside the Doomsday Castle]
Once a burst of atmospheric radiation hits the ground, it could induce
strong currents in telephone and electrical cables, which can short out
transformers, said Daniel Baker, a physicist at the University of
Colorado. Transformers take high voltage current and "transform" it into
low voltage current that can be used by households. But an EMP could
derail this process, creating currents that overheat transformers and
cause them to fail, Baker said.
Brent, the patriarch of the "Doomsday Castle" clan, thinks that terrorists or a rogue nation could loft a nuke high enough to take out the electricity grid
over the eastern United States or Southeast, he told LiveScience.
(Family members aren't disclosing their last name or location for fear
of curious and/or hostile fans showing up on their castle steps.)
The family behind the National
Geographic Channel's "Doomsday Castle." From left to right: Brent II,
Lindsey, Brent, Michael, Ashley, Dawn-Marie.
Credit: National Geographic Channel
But such a nuclear attack would be nigh suicidal for any country, as
the United States could retaliate with its nuclear submarines, which
lurk in the oceans around the world out of the range of any EMP threat,
according to the commission. It's also hard to imagine that a rogue
terror group could accomplish such a feat, due the technical difficulty
of the task. And in either case, the missile would have to make it into
the middle of the country, eluding U.S. missile defenses, according to a
fact sheet from the Department of Homeland Security. Solar flares
An electromagnetic surge from a solar storm
is a more likely threat for an EMP. Generally, experts expect a bad
solar storm to reach Earth about once every century, Baker said. The
last time one hit the planet was during the Carrington event, when
particles from a powerful coronal mass ejection overloaded telegraph
wires and set paper messages on fire in 1859. A coronal mass ejection is an enormous sun eruption of super-hot plasma that spews charged particles across the solar system.
At that time, the world was just beginning to use widespread electronic
communications. Baker and his colleagues just submitted a paper that
details a coronal mass ejection that took place in July 2012. In that
event, some 80 billion pounds of energized particles were ejected from
the sun at a speed of several million miles per hour. Luckily it missed
Earth. But if it had occurred one week earlier, it would have been aimed
directly toward our planet — with catastrophic results. [The Worst Solar Storms in History]
"Given our current state of readiness, we'd still be picking up the pieces," Baker said.
Bad solar storms work by sending "blobs" of energized particles toward
the Earth, carrying their own magnetic field, Baker said. This
missile-like group of particles can "open a gate" in Earth's magnetic
field, allowing energetic particles to enter the high atmosphere and
send currents all the way down to the planet's surface, he said. These
can induce currents in the electrical grid, overheating transformers and
causing them to fail. And these things can take months or years to
replace. "You can't exactly buy another at Sears," Baker said. Preparation and protection
There are ways to protect against an EMP attack or a solar storm,
although they involve coating certain electrical parts and allowing
electrical current to be routed around transformers, Baker said — steps
that would be expensive, he said. Installing extra transmission lines
and generators could help divert power around vulnerable nodes in the
grid, he added.
One way to protect devices is to encase them in Faraday cages, wherein a
shell of conductive material prevents them from experiencing external
electromagnetic currents. The military protects some of its most
important facilities this way, Brent said.
While some preppers
take things a little far, both an EMP attack and control mass ejection
are "genuine concerns," Baker said. "I don't think taking preparations
for both is unwarranted" by governments and individuals, he said.
Governments can prepare by looking at how to better secure the
electrical grid, Baker said. Some reasonable preparations individuals
can take involve keeping enough food and water to last a week or more,
he added. EmailDouglas Main or follow him onTwitterorGoogle+. Follow us @livescience, Facebookor Google+. Article originally on LiveScience.
(The following is about Scalar Waves being used for mind control. This is included here because it is coming that a Massive EMP could stop cold in its tracks) by Nicholas Jones September 2001 from 9-11TheMotherOfAllBlackOperations Website Spanish version This article is an overview of how we are controlled by technology - from having our brainwaves deliberately changed en masse by transmitters regulating our state of consciousness, to how we are victims of electromagnetic waves disrupting the state of our health and finally how many of us will die, as decided by our global masters. Earth is wrapped in a donut shaped magnetic field. Circular lines of flux continuously descend into the North Pole and emerge from the South Pole. The ionosphere, an electromagnetic-wave conductor, 100 kms above the earth, consists of a layer of electrically charged particles act...
How to Prepare for and Stay Comfortable During a Power Outage [Short term and Long Term] 196 REPLIES Share 912 Pin 3.3K Tweet 40 +1 37 Email SHARES 4.3K Editor’s Note: This resource has been combined and updated for 2018! With winter comes the wind, the snow, the ice and the extreme cold. And, more likely than not, winter will also bring the occasional power outage. Have you asked yourself what you would do if the power went out for a day or two or for even a week? What would you do? Could you fend for yourself? Could you keep yourself warm in the winter and cool in the summer? What about food? Would your refrigerated and frozen items spoil? And yikes! What would you do about money if credit cards and ATMs no longer worked? Did I mention that in all likelihood you would not have internet access either? Save Today I would like to provide 15 tips for getting through short-term power outages. These a...
Testimony of George H. Baker Professor Emeritus, James Madison University Before the House Committee on National Security and the House Subcommittee on the Interior of the House Committee on Oversight and Government Reform Joint Hearing on “The EMP Threat: The State of Preparedness against the Threat of an Electromagnetic Pulse (EMP) Event” May 13, 2015 Key Findings from the EMP Commission Report of 2008 The Commission to Assess the threat to the United States from Electromagnetic Pulse, on which I served as principal staff, made a compelling case for protecting critical infrastructure against the nuclear electromagnetic pulse (EMP) and geomagnetic disturbances (GMD) caused by severe solar storms. Their 2008 Critical Infrastructure Report explains EMP effects, consequences, and protection means for critical infrastructure sectors. EMP and GMD are particularly challenging in that they interfere with electrical power and electronic data, control...
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