Overview
- A peer-reviewed proposal published this week modeled a May 2024‑class geomagnetic storm and found that releasing gas from six spacecraft could cut storm intensity by roughly 50 percent or more.
- The concept would station spacecraft in orbit that release a sunlight‑ionized, barium‑like gas into the dayside magnetosphere to raise plasma density and make the magnetic shield harder to disturb.
- The paper’s May 2024 simulation required about 384 tons of gas and more than 436 tons when including tanks and buses, a payload the authors say could be launched by current or near‑future heavy‑lift rockets.
- Scientists warn the full effects are unknown and say injecting hundreds of tons of ionized material could alter auroras, change magnetospheric behavior, pose environmental risks, and complicate space operations; some experts also say cheaper protections may be preferable.
- Authors and coverage say the idea remains conceptual and will need far more modeling, laboratory and in‑space tests, environmental assessment, and international governance before any operational use is possible.