Researchers at Kyoto University have suggested a possible connection between solar flares and earthquakes through ionospheric disturbances. Their theoretical model indicates that electrostatic forces from space weather could influence stressed fault zones in Earth's crust. The study does not claim direct causation but highlights a potential interaction mechanism.
Scientists from Kyoto University have introduced a theoretical framework exploring how solar activity might contribute to earthquake initiation. The model posits that intense solar flares can alter the ionosphere, generating electric fields that penetrate fractured areas in the Earth's crust. These regions, containing high-temperature and high-pressure water possibly in a supercritical state, function like capacitors linked to both the ground and the lower ionosphere.
When solar surges increase electron density in the ionosphere, a negatively charged layer forms. Through capacitive coupling, this creates strong electric fields in microscopic voids within the rock, producing electrostatic pressures comparable to tidal or gravitational stresses known to affect fault stability. Calculations show that disturbances from major solar flares, with total electron content increases of several tens of TEC units, could generate pressures of several megapascals in crustal voids.
Observations of ionospheric anomalies before major quakes—such as electron density spikes, lowered ionospheric altitude, and altered propagation of traveling disturbances—have traditionally been seen as crustal stress effects. This new perspective proposes a bidirectional influence: Earth processes affect the ionosphere, and ionospheric changes may feedback into the crust.
The researchers reference the 2024 Noto Peninsula earthquake in Japan, which followed periods of strong solar flare activity. They emphasize that the timing offers no proof of causation but supports the idea of ionospheric disturbances as a contributing factor for faults near failure.
Published on 3 February 2026 in the International Journal of Plasma Environmental Science and Technology, the work by Kira Mizuno, Minghui Kao, and Ken Umeno integrates plasma physics, atmospheric science, and geophysics. It challenges the view that earthquakes stem only from internal planetary forces, suggesting that monitoring ionospheric conditions with underground data could enhance seismic risk assessment. Future efforts will involve GNSS-based ionospheric tomography and space weather analysis to evaluate these electrostatic effects.