SCi - 2 X1 Flares today, 3rd in progress X5.2 & climbing

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Still climbing as I type.... GO SUCKER!!!

-- Anonymous, April 02, 2001

Answers

O My GOD.. X8.1 and still climbing!!!!!

-- Anonymous, April 02, 2001

X10 MEGAFLARE!!!!!!!!!

-- Anonymous, April 02, 2001

Links Carl... I need a link!

-- Anonymous, April 02, 2001

X16 no X18 and climbing still!!!!!

http://www.sec.noaa.gov/rt_plots/xray_1m.html

-- Anonymous, April 02, 2001


Sheeple needs a link, and Carl needs a Depends.

-- Anonymous, April 02, 2001


Thanks Carl... this one looks impressive

-- Anonymous, April 02, 2001

Impressive? Good thing this didn't blow 3 days ago when 9393 was center of the disk... I think this is the largets solar flare in recorded history, correct me if I'm wrong...

-- Anonymous, April 02, 2001

Far be it from me. . .

And a very good thing too.

-- Anonymous, April 02, 2001


Response to SCi - 2 X1 Flares today, 3rd in progress X5.2 & climbing (and some new aurora borealis pics)

BBC Monday, 2 April, 2001, 12:27 GMT 13:27 UK

Light show set to continue

The view from Colorado (Image courtesy of Mark Cunningham)

By BBC News Online science editor Dr David Whitehouse

The largest sunspot group in over a decade may be shrinking, but it still managed to let off another gigantic flare on Sunday.

The explosion has sent another cloud of hot, electrically charged gas towards the Earth. When it reaches us on Tuesday, scientists predict, there will be another fine display of aurorae like those visible from the US on Saturday.

The Southern lights, viewed from Dunedin, New Zealand

The sunspot group, designated Noaa 9393, is now being carried to the Sun's edge by solar rotation, but it is still capable of producing further flares. This is because it still has a lot of energy stored in its magnetic sheath that could be released at any time.

"Noaa 9393 has been a great sunspot group," said Robin Scagell, of the UK's Society for Popular Astronomy, "and it may not have finished yet."

Idaho was one of the best places (Image courtesy of Forrest Ray)

As skywatchers wait for Tuesday's possible display of aurorae, more reports are coming in of Saturday's magnificent spectacle that was caused by an explosion on Noaa 9393 on Thursday.

The American space agency's (Nasa) Polar Orbiting Environmental Satellite (Poes) caught the ring of light positioned over the Earth's northern magnetic pole, produced by charged particles from the Sun being funneled down on to the planet by magnetic forces.

The whole sky lit up in North Dakota

Observers in the western US had the best view, reporting fine displays of deep orange and red streamers with an overall red glow that stretched from the northern horizon to beyond the zenith.

Aurorae were also detected in the Southern Hemisphere. Some observers saw them as a diffuse red glow visible from more northerly latitudes than is usual.

UK observers got a poor view. Jim Henderson in Aberdeenshire said he saw a fairly widespread diffuse red glow, but it was very vague and nowhere near as good as the display of last year.

The Poes satellite tracked the Northern Lights

-- Anonymous, April 02, 2001


Well crap... looks like it was to far from the center of the disk... damn thing sat for days with us right in it's sights, and waits to really blow when all it will do is maybe clip us...

Damn sun anyway... :(

-- Anonymous, April 02, 2001



Carl, is this the enormous spot that they've been saying will explode? Or is this another one?

-- Anonymous, April 02, 2001

yeah, this was the one, but it waited to long to be any real fireworks... X18, or 17.1 depending on the GOES reading you chose, biggest flare since they started recording using this scale in 1976 and it freaking misses!!!! The one that knocked out the power in Canada in 1989 was an X15...

I'm pissed....

-- Anonymous, April 02, 2001


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