![]() |
AstroAlert: Powerful Solar Flare Creates Strong Space Radiation Storm
We MIGHT get a strong Aurora if they sky clears
================================================== =============== This Is SKY & TELESCOPE's AstroAlert for Sun-Earth Interactions ================================================== =============== A s t r o A l e r t Sun-Earth Alert Solar Terrestrial Dispatch http://www.spacew.com 17 January 2005 POWERFUL X-CLASS SOLAR FLARE CREATES STRONG SPACE RADIATION STORM A powerful X-class solar flare (class X3.8) erupted from active sunspot Region 10720 at 09:52 UTC (4:52 am EST) on 17 January. This remarkable event involved a steady increase in solar x-ray intensities for a period of over 2 hours before beginning a slow decline.X-raysremainedaboveM-classlevels for over five and a half hours. The solar explosion was also exceptionally "loud." At frequencies of 10 cm (about 2800 MHz), the explosion was over 80 times louder than the background noise of the Sun, registering a burst intensity of 12,000 sfu (the normal background level being about 150 sfu). The solar flare and the associated high velocity coronal mass ejection succeeded in accelerating protons to near relativistic velocities, arriving at the Earth within tens of minutes. The huge influx of energetic particles increased the existing space radiation storm from a category S2 to a category S3 event, which is sufficient to be of concern to spacecraft operators and astronauts. This event was associated with a high velocity Earthward-directed coronal mass ejection. Although an analysis of the CME is not yet complete, there is fair certainty that its arrival at the Earth will result in periods of major to severe geomagnetic and auroral storm activity. The arrival time is yet to be determined, but a good guess would probably be later on 18 and into 19 January (UTC time). Region 10720 still appears to be capable of unleashing additional energetic solar events, which it may do (perhaps more than once) during the next 5 to 6 days before it transits the western solar limb. ** End of Astroalert ** |
AstroAlert: Powerful Solar Flare Creates Strong Space Radiation Storm
To see if it is worth braving the snow, wind, rain tonight, try this
worthwhile site for (UK) aurora info. http://www.dcs.lancs.ac.uk/iono/auro...h/rt_activity/ Karatepe wrote in message ... We MIGHT get a strong Aurora if they sky clears ================================================== =============== This Is SKY & TELESCOPE's AstroAlert for Sun-Earth Interactions ================================================== =============== A s t r o A l e r t Sun-Earth Alert Solar Terrestrial Dispatch http://www.spacew.com 17 January 2005 POWERFUL X-CLASS SOLAR FLARE CREATES STRONG SPACE RADIATION STORM A powerful X-class solar flare (class X3.8) erupted from active sunspot Region 10720 at 09:52 UTC (4:52 am EST) on 17 January. This remarkable event involved a steady increase in solar x-ray intensities for a period of over 2 hours before beginning a slow decline.X-raysremainedaboveM-classlevels for over five and a half hours. The solar explosion was also exceptionally "loud." At frequencies of 10 cm (about 2800 MHz), the explosion was over 80 times louder than the background noise of the Sun, registering a burst intensity of 12,000 sfu (the normal background level being about 150 sfu). The solar flare and the associated high velocity coronal mass ejection succeeded in accelerating protons to near relativistic velocities, arriving at the Earth within tens of minutes. The huge influx of energetic particles increased the existing space radiation storm from a category S2 to a category S3 event, which is sufficient to be of concern to spacecraft operators and astronauts. This event was associated with a high velocity Earthward-directed coronal mass ejection. Although an analysis of the CME is not yet complete, there is fair certainty that its arrival at the Earth will result in periods of major to severe geomagnetic and auroral storm activity. The arrival time is yet to be determined, but a good guess would probably be later on 18 and into 19 January (UTC time). Region 10720 still appears to be capable of unleashing additional energetic solar events, which it may do (perhaps more than once) during the next 5 to 6 days before it transits the western solar limb. ** End of Astroalert ** |
AstroAlert: Powerful Solar Flare Creates Strong Space Radiation Storm
On Mon, 17 Jan 2005 17:14:55 -0000, "Pat Slattery" wrote: To see if it is worth braving the snow, wind, rain tonight, try this worthwhile site for (UK) aurora info. http://www.dcs.lancs.ac.uk/iono/auro...h/rt_activity/ Bz has also decreased from 20 nT North earlier today to just over 4 nT North a few moments ago. If it swings south, pray for the clouds to clear! -- Pete http://www.digitalsky.org.uk |
AstroAlert: Powerful Solar Flare Creates Strong Space Radiation Storm
"Pete Lawrence" wrote in message ... On Mon, 17 Jan 2005 17:14:55 -0000, "Pat Slattery" wrote: To see if it is worth braving the snow, wind, rain tonight, try this worthwhile site for (UK) aurora info. http://www.dcs.lancs.ac.uk/iono/auro...h/rt_activity/ Bz has also decreased from 20 nT North earlier today to just over 4 nT North a few moments ago. If it swings south, pray for the clouds to clear! You seem to be the expert on this Pete, where are you getting your readings from? -- Rob Overfield Hull http://www.astrosport02.karoo.net/YorkshireWeather/ |
AstroAlert: Powerful Solar Flare Creates Strong Space Radiation Storm
On Mon, 17 Jan 2005 17:21:38 -0000, "Rob Overfield"
wrote: "Pete Lawrence" wrote in message .. . On Mon, 17 Jan 2005 17:14:55 -0000, "Pat Slattery" wrote: To see if it is worth braving the snow, wind, rain tonight, try this worthwhile site for (UK) aurora info. http://www.dcs.lancs.ac.uk/iono/auro...h/rt_activity/ Bz has also decreased from 20 nT North earlier today to just over 4 nT North a few moments ago. If it swings south, pray for the clouds to clear! You seem to be the expert on this Pete, where are you getting your readings from? X = unknown quantity, Spurt = drip under pressure - very apt in this case ;-) http://www.dcs.lancs.ac.uk/iono/auro...h/rt_activity/ as posted by Pat, is excellent and the trace is starting to wobble by the looks of it. Click on the "Live data links & explanation" link and you have access to some 'live' data sites. http://sec.noaa.gov/ace/MAG_SWEPAM_24h.html gives you a Bz graph. www.SpaceWeather.com also gives you a Bz figure on the left hand column of the page. It also gives a nice explanation as to why south is preferable. It could go any way at the moment. However, activity is better than no activity and POES, CANOPUS and York are both showing that something's apparently starting to happen. -- Pete http://www.digitalsky.org.uk |
AstroAlert: Powerful Solar Flare Creates Strong Space Radiation Storm
Of course, we shouldn't forget that that natural aurora filter - the
Moon is up and about tonight :( -- Pete http://www.digitalsky.org.uk |
AstroAlert: Powerful Solar Flare Creates Strong Space Radiation Storm
"Pete Lawrence" wrote in message ... On Mon, 17 Jan 2005 17:21:38 -0000, "Rob Overfield" wrote: "Pete Lawrence" wrote in message .. . On Mon, 17 Jan 2005 17:14:55 -0000, "Pat Slattery" wrote: To see if it is worth braving the snow, wind, rain tonight, try this worthwhile site for (UK) aurora info. http://www.dcs.lancs.ac.uk/iono/auro...h/rt_activity/ Bz has also decreased from 20 nT North earlier today to just over 4 nT North a few moments ago. If it swings south, pray for the clouds to clear! You seem to be the expert on this Pete, where are you getting your readings from? X = unknown quantity, Spurt = drip under pressure - very apt in this case ;-) http://www.dcs.lancs.ac.uk/iono/auro...h/rt_activity/ as posted by Pat, is excellent and the trace is starting to wobble by the looks of it. Click on the "Live data links & explanation" link and you have access to some 'live' data sites. http://sec.noaa.gov/ace/MAG_SWEPAM_24h.html gives you a Bz graph. www.SpaceWeather.com also gives you a Bz figure on the left hand column of the page. It also gives a nice explanation as to why south is preferable. It could go any way at the moment. However, activity is better than no activity and POES, CANOPUS and York are both showing that something's apparently starting to happen. Funny, I look at those 3 sites too! I agree, it looks like something might happen.... Thanks for the info, I appreciate it. -- Rob Overfield Hull http://www.astrosport02.karoo.net/YorkshireWeather/ |
AstroAlert: Powerful Solar Flare Creates Strong Space Radiation Storm
On Mon, 17 Jan 2005 17:38:56 +0000, Pete Lawrence
wrote: On Mon, 17 Jan 2005 17:21:38 -0000, "Rob Overfield" wrote: "Pete Lawrence" wrote in message ... On Mon, 17 Jan 2005 17:14:55 -0000, "Pat Slattery" wrote: To see if it is worth braving the snow, wind, rain tonight, try this worthwhile site for (UK) aurora info. http://www.dcs.lancs.ac.uk/iono/auro...h/rt_activity/ Bz has also decreased from 20 nT North earlier today to just over 4 nT North a few moments ago. If it swings south, pray for the clouds to clear! How far south are these things visible? Gareth -- Help the Tsunami Victims http://www.justgiving.com/tsunami |
AstroAlert: Powerful Solar Flare Creates Strong Space RadiationStorm
This is a good site:
http://www.spacew.com/plots.php As Pete said, keep an eye on the Bz value a northwars pointing field will surpress the formatin of the aurora, southwrd will enhance it. |
AstroAlert: Powerful Solar Flare Creates Strong Space Radiation Storm
"Gareth Slee" wrote in message ... On Mon, 17 Jan 2005 17:38:56 +0000, Pete Lawrence wrote: On Mon, 17 Jan 2005 17:21:38 -0000, "Rob Overfield" wrote: "Pete Lawrence" wrote in message ... On Mon, 17 Jan 2005 17:14:55 -0000, "Pat Slattery" wrote: To see if it is worth braving the snow, wind, rain tonight, try this worthwhile site for (UK) aurora info. http://www.dcs.lancs.ac.uk/iono/auro...h/rt_activity/ Bz has also decreased from 20 nT North earlier today to just over 4 nT North a few moments ago. If it swings south, pray for the clouds to clear! How far south are these things visible? Well Pete has seen them from the S coast in the last year or two, that I know... -- Rob Overfield Hull http://www.astrosport02.karoo.net/YorkshireWeather/ |
All times are GMT. The time now is 02:44 AM. |
Powered by vBulletin® Copyright ©2000 - 2025, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.
Copyright ©2004-2006 WeatherBanter.co.uk