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Forwarded from Space Weather Today
🚨BIG SUNSPOT ALERT: One of the biggest sunspots in years is emerging over the sun's northeastern limb. AR3112 has more than a dozen dark cores scattered across 130,000 km of solar terrain, making it an easy target for backyard telescopes using the projection method. Magnetograms of the sunspot group reveal a delta-class magnetic field that harbors energy for X-class solar flares https://www.spaceweather.com/images2022/02oct22/newspot_crop_strip_opt.gif
Forwarded from Space Weather Today
HIGH SOLAR ACTIVITY: The sun just strobed Earth with a pair of strong M-class solar flares. In quick succession on Oct. 1st and 2nd, NASA's Solar Dynamics Observatory recorded flashes of extreme ultraviolet radiation: https://www.spaceweather.com/images2022/02oct22/doublem_teal_crop_strip.gif

Radiation from the flares ionized the top of Earth's atmosphere, causing shortwave radio blackouts over the Pacific side of North America and later Australasia. Ham radio operators, aviators and mariners may have noticed fadeouts and other unusual propagation effects at frequencies below 20 MHz.

These flares registered M5.9 and M8.7, the second explosion only decimal points away from being an X-flare. If this progression continues, an X-flare could occur before the weekend is over.
Forwarded from Space Weather Today
Solar wind
speed: 437.0 km/sec
density: 1.01 protons/cm3
Updated: Today at 1112 UT

X-ray Solar Flares πŸ”₯
6-hr max: C4 0621 UT Oct02
24-hr: M8 0221 UT Oct02
Updated: Today at: 1115 UT
Forwarded from Space Weather Today
🚨MULTIPLE CMES ARE COMING: NOAA forecasters say there is a chance of G2-class geomagnetic storms on Oct. 4th when multiple CMEs might sideswipe Earth's magnetic field. Most of the incoming CMEs were hurled into space by sunspot AR3110, which unleashed a series of strong flares (M5.9, M8.7, X1) over the weekend. During G2-class storms, naked-eye auroras can descend into the United States as low as New York and Idaho.
Forwarded from Space Weather Today
A BIG DANGEROUS SUNSPOT: One of the biggest sunspots in years has just rotated over the sun's northeastern limb. Introducing, AR3112.

AR3112 has more than a dozen dark cores scattered across 130,000 km of solar terrain, making it an easy target for backyard solar telescopes. Don't have a solar filter? Use the projection method, instead.

The image above is a magnetic map of the sun's surface with a white light photo of AR3112 inset. It shows what makes this sunspot group so dangerous. Positive and negative magnetic polarities are bumping together--an explosive mixture that could produce an X-class solar flare.

The emergence of AR3112 already fully formed and unstable could herald two weeks of high solar activity as the sunspot group transits the solar disk, facing Earth the whole time. Stay tuned.
2025/10/23 02:51:39
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