wow, a bit of solar activity...

Christian for Israel

Knight of Jerusalem
after being silent for so long, today we get an M class flare...

noaa_xrays.gif


of course, what's really strange are these spikes on the magnetometer:

noaa_mag_3d.gif
 

penumbra

centrist member
I know this reply probably belongs in unex, but I felt the solar flare, but haven't had time to get online and check it out til now.
 

gdpetti

Inactive
FWIW. That dark(companion) star that's on its way is said to quiet the sun as it passes by and resets the system.
 

Heliobas Disciple

TB Fanatic
from today's http://www.spaceweather.com/
(fair use applies)

SOLAR ACTIVITY ALERT: With little warning, three big sunspots have materialized and on March 25th one of them (989) unleashed an M2-class solar flare. This is the biggest flare of the year and it signals a significant increase in solar activity. "It's March Madness," says Greg Piepol who photographed the three sunspots from his backyard observatory in Rockville, Maryland

direct link to picture:
http://spaceweather.com/submissions...image_name=Greg-Piepol-032508h_1206460227.jpg
(fair use applies)
 

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Signwatcher

Has No Life - Lives on TB
Prepare for the Worst, Because Solar Storms Are About to Get Ugly
By Erin Biba 03.24.08 | 6:00 PM

Every 11 years or so, the sun gets a little pissy. It breaks out in a rash of planet-sized sunspots that spew superhot gas, hurling clouds of electrons, protons, and heavier ions toward Earth at nearly the speed of light. These solar windstorms have been known to knock out power grids and TV broadcasts, and our growing reliance on space-based technology makes us more vulnerable than ever to their effects. On January 3, scientists discovered a reverse-polarity sunspot, signaling the start of a new cycle — and some are predicting that at its peak (in about four years) things are gonna get nasty. Here's a forecast for 2012.
Detours
Clumps of ions in the atmosphere could interfere with GPS. Satellite signals are slowed by bumping into particles, meaning your trusty navigator may lose its way. Remember those colorful paper things called maps?
Falling Satellites
Increased solar energy heats Earth's atmosphere, causing it to expand. That's a drag on low-flying satellites and can even knock them out of orbit. A solar storm in 1979 deposited Skylab on Australia.
Layovers in Alaska
Particles are drawn to Earth's magnetic poles, right through popular flight paths. Electrons absorb the energy in shortwave signals, causing radio blackouts — and unscheduled stops in Anchorage.
Light Shows
Auroras occur when waves of charged particles light up gases in the upper atmosphere. As more particles stream in, the so-called aurora oval grows, bringing the "northern lights" as far south as Key West.

http://www.wired.com/science/discoveries/magazine/16-04/st_spaceweather

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