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    Solar Activity

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    Post  gilly Sun Aug 12, 2012 12:36 am

    First topic message reminder :

    I am starting this new thread in order to tell the forum of the state of the sun.

    1752 was the last time the sun went through a maximum energy thrust--the sun will repeat this during 2013.

    The 'Arora Borialis' has again been seen as far south as 'california' and the southern equivalent as far north as 'Cape Town'

    If you are interested in this -then I will keep you updated via NASA and other scientific institutes!

    The current 'weather' anomolies around the world 'MAY' be a part of this--it has not yet ben proven or disproven!

    PPLLnL

    Peter
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    Post  SpiritVoices Thu Feb 14, 2013 7:19 pm

    A while ago,Peter something either on the news or maybe something I read in a newspaper.
    Definately about communications being affected thought this may have been in the near future.
    I know BT were up the spout a short while later and the question was....'was this due to some kind of activity approaching earth.
    Well,will find out sooner than later....

    joanie
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    Post  gilly Thu Feb 14, 2013 7:31 pm

    I am pretty certain this relates to the solar flares--the news items I have been logging from NASA etc. A sun spot explodes and sends out a geomagnetic flare--if this hits a satelite--goodbye satelite. Otherwise it raises the energy of our Earths magnetic field and we get wonderful AURORA BOREALIS or Northern lights seen last year as far south as California.
    Peter
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    Post  SpiritVoices Thu Feb 14, 2013 8:24 pm

    That's it,Peter.

    (the old memory getting bad... :blush: )
    I remember now. The Northern lights...wonderful.
    I remember seeing the Northern lights one late night when going to bed.
    I drew the curtains back and there they were. All in their glory.
    My husband who originates from the south was astounded by the sight,first time he had ever seen them.

    Joanie


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    Post  gilly Fri Feb 15, 2013 2:34 pm

    The asteroid, known as "2012 DA14," will pass inside the ring of Earth's geosynchronous weather and communications satellites tomorrow, coming within just 17,200 miles of the Earth's surface at around 12:30 p.m.
    For those in the UK this will be 19.25 GMT.
    Peter
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    Post  SpiritVoices Fri Feb 15, 2013 5:51 pm

    That is not far,Peter. It is only 12,000 miles to Australia.
    Very near indeed.

    Joanie
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    Post  gilly Sat Feb 16, 2013 4:35 pm




    RUSSIAN METEOR UPDATE: On Friday,
    February 15th at 9:30 am local time in Russia, a small asteroid struck the
    atmosphere over the city of Chelyabinsk and exploded. According to reports
    from news organizations and Russian authorities, as many as 1000 people received
    minor injuries from the shock wave. This is the most energetic recorded
    meteor strike since the Tunguska impact of 1908.


    Researchers have conducted a preliminary analysis of the event.
    "Here is what we know so far," says Bill Cooke, head of NASA's
    Meteoroid Environment Office. "The asteroid was about 15 meters in
    diameter and weighed approximately 7000 metric tons. It struck Earth's
    atmosphere at 40,000 mph (18 km/s) and broke apart about 12 to 15 miles (20
    to 25 km) above Earth's surface. The energy of the resulting explosion was in
    the vicinity of 300 kilotons of TNT."



    "A shock wave propagated down and struck the city below, causing large numbers of
    windows to break, some walls to collapse, and minor damage throughout the
    city," he continued. "When you hear about injuries, those are
    undoubtedly due to the effects of the shock wave, not due to fragments striking
    the ground. There are undoubtedly fragments on the ground, but as of this time
    we know of no recovered fragments that we can verify."



    It
    is natural to wonder if this event has any connection to today's
    record-setting flyby of asteroid 2012 DA14. Paul Chodas of the Near Earth
    Object Program at JPL says no. "The Russian fireball is not related to
    2012 DA14 in any way. It's an incredible coincidence that we have had these two
    rare events in one day."


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    Post  1antique Sat Feb 16, 2013 5:39 pm

    Yup...merely a coincidence. Solar Activity - Page 3 619524
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    Post  gilly Mon Feb 18, 2013 1:45 pm

    THE UN BRACES FOR STORMY SPACE WEATHER - Forecasters say solar maximum is due in 2013. To prepare, the United Nations is taking steps to organize an international response to stormy space weather.
    In 1958, the UN General Assembly "recognizing the common interest of mankind in furthering the peaceful use of outer space ... and desiring to avoid the extension of present national rivalries into this new field...." established the Committee on the Peaceful Uses of Outer Space (COPUOS). COPUOS became a forum for development of laws and treaties governing space-related activities. Moreover, it set the stage for international cooperation on problems that no one nation could handle alone.
    As the years went by, COPUOS membership ballooned from 18 to 74 nations, while items such as space debris, near-Earth asteroids, space-based disaster management, and global navigation were added to the committee's regular agenda. At each annual meeting in Vienna, Austria, COPUOS members confer about these issues, which present some key challenge or peril to the whole planet. This year, a new item is on the agenda: space weather.
    "This is a significant development. By adding space weather to the regular agenda of the COPUOS Science and Technical Subcommittee, the UN is recognizing solar activity as a concern on par with orbital debris and close-approaching asteroids." Space weather is the outer-space equivalent of weather on Earth. Instead of wind, rain and snow, however, space has radiation storms, the solar wind, flares and coronal mass ejections. The source of space weather is the sun, and although solar storms are launched 93 million miles from Earth, they can make themselves felt on our planet.
    "Strong solar storms can knock out power, disable satellites, and scramble GPS. It's a global problem made worse by increasing worldwide reliance on sensitive electronic technologies." This week, members of the Science and Technical Subcommittee heard about some of the potential economic impacts of space weather. For instance, modern oil and gas drilling frequently involve directional drilling to tap oil and gas reservoirs deep in the Earth. This drilling technique depends on accurate positioning using global navigation systems. Drill heads could go awry, however, if the sun interferes with GPS reception.
    Solar energetic particles at the magnetic poles can force the re-routing of international airline flights resulting in delays and increased fuel consumption. Ground induced currents generated by magnetic storms can damage transformers and increase corrosion in critical energy pipelines. Permanent damage to the Salem New Jersey Nuclear Plant GSU Transformer was caused by the severe geomagnetic storm of March 13, 1989.
    "Space weather is a significant natural hazard that requires global preparedness. This new agenda item links space science and space technology for the benefit of all humankind." The elevation of space weather on COPUOS’s agenda coincides with the 10th anniversary of the International Living With a Star Program on Feb. 14. The program is an ad hoc group of nations that got together in 2003 to lay the groundwork for worldwide cooperation in the study of space weather. The UN will help take their efforts to the next level.
    A key problem that the UN can help solve is a gap -- many gaps, actually -- in storm coverage around our planet. When a solar storm sweeps past Earth, waves of ionization ripple through Earth’s upper atmosphere, electric currents flow through the topsoil, and the whole planet's magnetic field begins to shake. A NASA-funded study by the National Academy of Sciences lays out the economic consequences of severe space weather. "These are global phenomena, so we need to be able to monitor them all around the world."
    Industrialized countries tend to have an abundance of monitoring stations. They can keep track of local magnetism, ground currents, and ionization, and provide the data to researchers. Developing countries are where the gaps are, particularly at low latitudes around Earth's magnetic equator. With assistance from the UN, researchers may be able to extend sensor networks into regions where it was once politically unfeasible.
    Space weather might play a role in Earth’s climate, too. For example, the Maunder minimum, a 70-year period almost devoid of sunspots in the late 17th to early 18th century, coincided with prolonged, very cold winters in the northern hemisphere. Researchers are increasingly convinced that variations in solar activity have regional effects on climate and weather that pay no attention to national boundaries, and thus can only be studied in meaningful detail by international consortia. Now that space weather has been elevated to a permanent place on the COPUOS agenda, it will be a matter of regular conversation among UN diplomats, scientists and emergency planners.

    Peter
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    Post  gilly Fri Mar 15, 2013 7:43 am

    Solar eruption may set off northern lights fury - The sun unleashed a huge cloud of superheated plasma Tuesday morning in a solar eruption known as a coronal mass ejection (CME). This cloud is not headed straight for Earth, but it could deliver a glancing blow to our planet today.

    Peter
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    Post  gilly Sun Mar 17, 2013 12:54 pm

    GEOMAGNETIC STORM WARNING - A fast-moving CME that left the sun on March 15th is expected to strike Earth's magnetic field today. NOAA forecasters estimate a 70% chance of polar geomagnetic storms when the cloud arrives. This means the sky could turn green on St. Patrick's Day! High latitude (and possibly even middle latitude) sky watchers should be alert for auroras this weekend.

    Peter
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    Post  gilly Mon Mar 18, 2013 6:50 pm

    STRONG CME IMPACT - As predicted, a coronal mass ejection (CME) hit Earth's magnetic field at 0600 UT on March 17th. The impact lifted the solar wind speed from 300 km/s to 700 km/s and sparked a moderately strong (Kp=6) geomagnetic storm. Northern Lights spilled across the Canadian border into the United States as far south as Colorado. In the contiguous United States, auroras appeared above New York, Washington, Minnesota, Wisconsin, Wyoming, Colorado, Michigan and the Dakotas. The show's not over. Geomagnetic storming is underway as Earth passes thrugh the wake of the CME. High-latitude sky watchers should remain alert for auroras.
    Peter
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    Post  gilly Wed Apr 03, 2013 9:14 pm

    Faint 'Red Arcs' Spotted Over Europe - Glowing red arcs invisible to the naked eye have now been detected high above most of Europe using advanced cameras pointed at the sky. When streams of high-energy, charged particles come rushing from the sun to batter Earth, they cause what are called geomagnetic storms. (Red arcs happen when oxygen atoms in the ionosphere emit light, after being excited by electrons heated at greater heights in Earth's magnetosphere.)
    These events are disruptions in the magnetosphere, the part of Earth's atmosphere dominated by the planet's magnetic field. The most dramatic effects of these storms are giant, bright auroras in Earth's polar regions, but the tempests result in other striking consequences as well, such as faintly glowing red arcs high up in the ionosphere. This is the electrically charged part of Earth's atmosphere, stretching from about 50 to 370 miles (85 to 600 kilometers) above the Earth.
    The arcs give off a very specific wavelength of red light, but are too faint to see with the naked eye. They appear at lower latitudes, unlike auroras, which typically occur over higher latitudes. Scientists had thought there was too much light pollution over Europe for the dim, red arcs to be visible. But now, the new All-Sky Imaging Air-Glow Observatory, located in northern Italy, is using cameras with highly sensitive sensors and a fish-eye lens to observe these red arcs and faint auroral activity over most of the continent.
    During a geomagnetic storm that struck Earth in 2011, the researchers found that red arcs could reach all the way down to Europe, stretching from Ireland in the west to Belarus in the east. The fact that scientists can now see these arcs over Europe means that, in combination with similar data from the Americas and the Pacific Ocean, researchers can now see how long the arcs stretch across vast distances over the planet "and thus how long it takes the magnetosphere to be drained of its storm-time energy." Such data could in turn help scientists analyze the effects of space activity on radio communications in real time and support projects aiming to model space weather.

    Peter
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    Post  gilly Fri Apr 12, 2013 7:45 am

    Considering 2013 is meant to be the peak of a solar cycle, it has been very quiet up there.
    Could this be the start of something special????

    Massive solar eruption could cause magnetic storm here on Earth - Early Thursday morning, solar observers watched as a dark spot on the sun erupted with an enormous flash of light, causing the biggest solar flare of 2013.

    Peter
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    Post  SpiritVoices Fri Apr 12, 2013 9:25 am

    Sounds ominous Peter. At least it's a bit warmer.... :asmile:

    Joanie
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    Post  gilly Fri Apr 12, 2013 11:11 pm


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    INCREASING CHANCE OF FLARES: NOAA forecasters have raised the odds of an X-class solar flare today to 15%. The move was prompted by yesterday's almost-X flare (M6), which hurled a CME toward Earth. Earth-facing sunspot AR1719 would be the probable source of any eruptions.
    STRONG SOLAR FLARE: The magnetic field of sunspot AR1719 erupted on April 11th at 0716 UT, producing an M6-class solar flare. NASA's Solar Dynamics Observatory recorded the explosion's extreme ultraviolet flash:
    Solar Activity - Page 3 M6red_strip
    Shortly after the flare, a CME emerged from the blast site. NOAA forecasters estimate a 60% chance of geomagnetic storms on April 13th when the cloud reaches Earth. High-latitude sky watchers, be alert for auroras!
    Peter
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    Post  gilly Sun Apr 14, 2013 7:11 pm

    Sun unleashed biggest solar flare of 2013 and sparked a temporary radio blackout on Earth. The largest solar flare of 2013 erupted from the sun Thursday. The short-lived radio communications blackout on Earth registered as an R2 event (on a scale of R1 to R5).

    A coronal mass ejection swept past Earth on April 13th around 22:55 UT. The impact rattled Earth's magnetic field and induced electrical currents in the ground around the Arctic Circle.

    Peter
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    Post  gilly Sun May 05, 2013 12:52 pm

    ETA AQUARID METEOR SHOWER - Earth is entering a stream of debris from Halley's Comet, source of the annual eta Aquarid meteor shower. Forecasters expect the shower to peak on May 5th and 6th with as many as 55 meteors per hour in the southern hemisphere and half that number in the north. The best time to look is during the dark hours before local sunrise.
    Peter
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    Post  gilly Mon May 06, 2013 11:03 am

    Sunspot AR1734 has a 'beta-gamma' magnetic field that harbors energy for M-class solar flares, almost-certainly Earth-directed because the sunspot is facing our planet. NOAA forecasters estimate a 45% chance of M-flares on May 6th. Around the world, amateur astronomers are snapping pictures of behemoth sunspot AR1734 as it crosses the solar disk. Three sunspots have beta-gamma magnetic fields that harbor energy for M-class solar flares: AR1731, AR1734, and AR1739.
    Sunspot group AR1739 erupted on May 3rd, producing an M5-class solar flare and a "solar tornado." The explosion also hurled a bright coronal mass ejection (CME) into space. Traveling almost 1300 km/s, the electrified cloud is expected to sweep past a couple of NASA spacecraft (EPOXI and Spitzer) on May 7th. No planets, however, were in the line of fire.

    Peter
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    Post  gilly Mon May 13, 2013 9:15 am

    FILAMENT ERUPTION - An unstable filament of magnetism on the Earthside of the sun erupted during the early hours of May 12th. The erupting filament did not spark a significant solar flare (that is, there was no strong flash of X-radiation), but it did hurl part of itself into space. A bright coronal mass ejection (CME) emerged from the blast site andcould deliver a slight, glancing blow to Earth's magnetic field on May 15th.
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    Post  gilly Wed May 15, 2013 5:16 pm

    CHANCE OF FLARES - NOAA forecasters estimate a 50% chance of X-class solar flares and an 80% chance of M-class solar flares today. The source would be active sunspot AR1748, which is turning toward Earth.
    When the week began, the sun hadn't unleashed an X-flare all year long. In only two days, sunspot AR1748 has produced four. The latest X-flare from this active sunspot occured this morning at 0152 Universal Time. Although the sunspot is not yet directly facing Earth, this flare might have produced a CME with an Earth-directed component.
    AR1748 has produced an X1.7-class flare (0217 UT on May 13), an X2.8-class flare (1609 UT on May 13), an X3.2-class flare (0117 UT on May 14), and an X1-class flare (0152 on May 15). These are the strongest flares of the year, and they signal a significant increase in solar activity.
    Although AR1748 is not directly facing Earth, its strong flares have nevertheless affected our atmosphere. UV and X-radiation hitting the top of the atmosphere ionizes atoms and molecules, creating ion waves over the dayside of the planet. Sudden ionospheric disturbances -- "SIDs" for short -- make themselves known by the effect they have on low-frequency radio signals. When a SID passes by, the atmosphere overhead becomes an good reflector for radio waves, allowing signals to be received from distant transmitters. More SIDS are in the offing.
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    Post  gilly Wed May 29, 2013 10:37 pm

    SOLAR WIND STORM - For the third day in a row, a remarkably fast (600 km/s - 700 km/s) stream of solar wind is blowing around Earth. This is causing magnetic unrest around the poles as well as elevated levels of high-energy electrons in Earth orbit. NOAA cautions satellite operators that "satellite systems may experience significant charging" in response to accumulated electrons.
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    Post  gilly Sun Jun 23, 2013 10:36 pm

    THE END.
    PPLLnL
    Peter
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    Post  SpiritVoices Sun Jun 30, 2013 4:39 pm

    Sorry to hear this,Peter.....I enjoyed reading your weather casts....

    Joan :love:

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