Abstract

Dedicated scientific measurements of the strength and direction of the Earth's field began at Greenwich and Kew observatories in London, UK, in the middle of the 19th century. Using advanced techniques for the time, light-sensitive photographic paper and light-levered reflections from magnetized needles allowed continuous analogue magnetograms to be recorded. By good fortune, both observatories were in full operation during the so-called Carrington storm in late August/early September 1859 providing as complete a record as possible. Based on digital images of the magnetograms and information from the observatory yearbooks and scientific papers scaling the measurements to SI units is possible at minute-mean cadence. However, due to the magnitude of the storm, periods of the greatest magnetic field variation are lost as the traces moved off-page. We present the most complete digitized magnetic records to date of the ten-day period from 25th August to 5th September 1859 encompassing the Carrington storm and its precursor on the 28th August.

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