Abstract

Geomagnetically Induced Currents (GIC) are a space weather effect, which affects ground-based technological structures at all latitudes on the Earth’s surface. GIC occurrence and amplitudes have been monitored in power grids located at high and middle latitudes since 1970s and 1980s, respectively. This monitoring provides information about the GIC intensity and the frequency of occurrence during geomagnetic storms. In this paper, we investigate GIC occurrence in a power network at low latitudes (in the central Brazilian region) during the solar cycles 23 and 24. Calculated and measured GIC data are compared for the most intense geomagnetic storms (i.e. −50 < Dst < −50 nT) of the solar cycle 24. The results obtained from this comparison show a good agreement. The success of the model employed for the calculation of GIC leads to the possibility of determining GIC for events during the solar cycle 23 as well. Calculated GIC in one transformer reached ca. 30 A during the “Halloween storm” in 2003 whilst most frequent intensities lie below 10 A. The normalized inverse cumulative frequency for GIC data was calculated for the solar cycle 23 in order to perform a statistical analysis. It was found that a q-exponential Tsallis distribution fits the calculated GIC frequency distribution for more than 99% of the data. This analysis provides an overview of the long-term GIC monitoring at low latitudes and suggests new insight into critical phenomena involved in the GIC generation.

Highlights

  • Induced Currents (GIC) are ground effects due to space weather phenomena

  • Another significant Geomagnetically Induced Currents (GIC) event occurred in March 1989, when the entire Canadian Hydro-Québec power system was disrupted for several hours during a geomagnetic storm (Bolduc 2002)

  • We present the analysis of the GIC measurements performed during 2009–2013 in the neutral of a high-voltage transformer at the Itumbiara substation located at low latitudes in central Brazil

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Summary

Introduction

Induced Currents (GIC) are ground effects due to space weather phenomena. The GIC have widely been monitored and studied in ground-based technological structures located at high latitudes, after the Carrington event that occurred on 1–2 September 1859 (Tsurutani et al 2003). Another significant GIC event occurred in March 1989, when the entire Canadian Hydro-Québec power system was disrupted for several hours during a geomagnetic storm (Bolduc 2002). Trivedi et al (2007) present GIC recordings around 15 A in a Brazilian power network during 2004, which were recently reproduced by calculations (Barbosa et al 2015) These GIC events lasted for around 5 hours on 7–9 November 2004. These GIC events lasted for around 5 hours on 7–9 November 2004. Watari et al (2009)

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