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I was wondering if someone could put to rest this question:
Can the electromagnetic radiation from this solar flare erase hard disks or other magnetic media? |
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I guess not (at least this time)... hard drive's still here, not erased.
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In article ,
Mad Scientist wrote: Can the electromagnetic radiation from this solar flare erase hard disks or other magnetic media? No. Except insofar as it might indirectly cause difficulties for software or other hardware, which might respond poorly and mistakenly decide that altering the contents of the disk was the right thing to do. -- MOST launched 30 June; first light, 29 July; 5arcsec | Henry Spencer pointing, 10 Sept; first science, early Oct; all well. | |
#4
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In article ,
Henry Spencer wrote: In article , Mad Scientist wrote: Can the electromagnetic radiation from this solar flare erase hard disks or other magnetic media? No. Except insofar as it might indirectly cause difficulties for software or other hardware, which might respond poorly and mistakenly decide that altering the contents of the disk was the right thing to do. Hmm ... not even the x-ray radiation? I wouldn't have thought it would have been very healthy, for say, laptop hardrives on the ISS. Nick |
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In article ,
Nicholas Fitzpatrick wrote: Can the electromagnetic radiation from this solar flare erase hard disks or other magnetic media? No. Except insofar as it might indirectly cause difficulties for software or other hardware, which might respond poorly... Hmm ... not even the x-ray radiation? I wouldn't have thought it would have been very healthy, for say, laptop hardrives on the ISS. X-rays don't affect magnetic media at all. (Much of the concern about passing magnetic media through, e.g., airport X-ray machines is baseless superstition. To the extent that it's legitimate, the issue is magnetic fields associated with the equipment, rather than the X-rays themselves.) -- MOST launched 30 June; first light, 29 July; 5arcsec | Henry Spencer pointing, 10 Sept; first science, early Oct; all well. | |
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Henry Spencer wrote:
In article , Nicholas Fitzpatrick wrote: Can the electromagnetic radiation from this solar flare erase hard disks or other magnetic media? No. Except insofar as it might indirectly cause difficulties for software or other hardware, which might respond poorly... Hmm ... not even the x-ray radiation? I wouldn't have thought it would have been very healthy, for say, laptop hardrives on the ISS. X-rays don't affect magnetic media at all. (Much of the concern about passing magnetic media through, e.g., airport X-ray machines is baseless superstition. To the extent that it's legitimate, the issue is magnetic fields associated with the equipment, rather than the X-rays themselves.) Also - those X-rays can't reach the ground - Earth's atmosphere is equivalent of roughly 10 meters of water. If I recall correctly that is deeper than most used-fuel basins in nuclear power plants. |
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Henry Spencer wrote:
X-rays don't affect magnetic media at all. True, at least for plausible fluences. (Much of the concern about passing magnetic media through, e.g., airport X-ray machines is baseless superstition. To the extent that it's legitimate, the issue is magnetic fields associated with the equipment, rather than the X-rays themselves.) I think it's very legitimate. Conveyer belts, or rather the motors that drive them, can easily erase tapes, diskettes, and disks, and other magnetic media on the belt. -- Keith F. Lynch - - http://keithlynch.net/ I always welcome replies to my e-mail, postings, and web pages, but unsolicited bulk e-mail (spam) is not acceptable. Please do not send me HTML, "rich text," or attachments, as all such email is discarded unread. |
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In article ,
Keith F. Lynch wrote: (Much of the concern about passing magnetic media through, e.g., airport X-ray machines is baseless superstition. To the extent that it's legitimate, the issue is magnetic fields associated with the equipment, rather than the X-rays themselves.) I think it's very legitimate. Conveyer belts, or rather the motors that drive them, can easily erase tapes, diskettes, and disks, and other magnetic media on the belt. While it is possible, "easily" is a vast overstatement. Motors usually don't produce strong external magnetic fields, and magnetic media are much more robust than people commonly think -- to have any effect at all, a magnet must be either very strong or very close (practically touching the media). -- MOST launched 30 June; first light, 29 July; 5arcsec | Henry Spencer pointing, 10 Sept; first science, early Oct; all well. | |
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