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Home / Science / ISS Crew Safe Amidst Major Solar Storm

ISS Crew Safe Amidst Major Solar Storm

20 Jan

•

Summary

  • Reports of ISS crew relocating during a geomagnetic storm are false.
  • A powerful solar flare on January 18 caused a 200-fold radiation spike.
  • Geomagnetic storm reached G4 level, with potential to reach it again.
ISS Crew Safe Amidst Major Solar Storm

Reports circulating on January 20, 2026, that the International Space Station (ISS) crew had relocated to a different module due to a geomagnetic storm have been confirmed as false by Roscosmos, Russia's space corporation. The station's crew remained in their designated areas.

This clarification comes after a significant solar event on January 18, 2026. The Sun emitted an X-class solar flare, which dramatically increased radiation levels in Earth's orbit by a factor of 200 due to a massive influx of accelerated protons. This solar flare also released a substantial cloud of plasma.

The ejected plasma cloud subsequently triggered a geomagnetic storm on the evening of January 19, 2026. The storm's intensity rapidly escalated, reaching a G4 (strong) level overnight. While it subsequently weakened to a G1 (minor) level by the morning of January 20, scientists indicated the possibility of it returning to G4 intensity later that day.

Disclaimer: This story has been auto-aggregated and auto-summarised by a computer program. This story has not been edited or created by the Feedzop team.
No, reports claiming the ISS crew relocated to a safer module during the geomagnetic storm on January 20 are false. Roscosmos has confirmed the crew remained in their designated areas.
A powerful X-class solar flare on January 18, 2026, released a cloud of plasma that triggered a geomagnetic storm, leading to significantly increased radiation levels in Earth's orbit.
The geomagnetic storm escalated to a G4 (strong) level overnight on January 20, 2026. It later weakened but had the potential to reach G4 intensity again.

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