Magnetic tape does not suffer damage from cosmic rays. That idea is utter tosh. Cosmic rays are charged particles they don't interfere with magnetic particles on tapes. Computer memory may rarely be altered by cosmic rays which is one reason why servers use ECC memory. In the old days of reel to reel tape it was good practice every year or 2 that the tape was de-spooled & re-spooled to prevent data 'burning through' but better design of more recent cartridge tapes means this is no longer necessary.
That's funny. If you studied a little you would know there is just about nothing on this planet that isn't damaged by cosmic rays and BG radiation - including you and I, but also hardened steel, glass, ceramics, chrome, plastics of all kinds. Really, everything!
So it's kinda silly to suggest that magnetic tapes are unaffected. LOL Now consider their construction... Spooled in a tight spiral. When a ray hits it, it doesn't just damage one area on a flat surface like disks are formed as... no, it may go through hundreds of layers and cause a whole bunch of information loss with just one strike.
You can do a search and find out how many millions of ray events are striking the Earth every second if you'd like. From there it's only a few simple equations to determine the chance over time that something the size of one of those tape spools gets hit - and how many times per period, etc.
Remember the Ultrium 5 and 6 tapes now have a data density 15,140+ bits/mm and the 1980's tapes you're referring to were 800 or 1600 CPI. That's about 566 bits/mm in the later case - half that for the 800's. The industry stopped updating the standards of those systems at about 2200 bits/mm and those were 9-track tapes with a parity track.
I know you want to defend tape but we have to be honest about things too.
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