Stargazing Solar Activity and Space Weather Update thread

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The discussion focuses on ongoing solar activity and space weather updates following the August 21, 2017, solar eclipse. Participants are encouraged to share significant solar events, including images and scientific articles. Currently, sunspot regions 2671 and 2672 are noted, with region 2672 expected to decline soon. Recent solar flares include M-class events, with predictions of active geomagnetic conditions and potential auroras at high latitudes. The conversation highlights the dynamic nature of solar observations and the importance of safety when viewing the sun.
  • #391
A BRIGHT COMET IS FALLING TOWARD THE SUN: Comet ATLAS (C/2024 G3) is falling toward the sun for a close encounter on Jan. 13th. If it survives the heat, it could become brighter than the planet Venus for a great photo-op in the evening sky. Southern hemisphere observers are favored, but some northerners will be able to see it, too.

c69361cb-3bc3-f0fe-6c8c-387a2f42ba43.jpg
Above: Comet ATLAS (C/2024 G3) falling toward the sun. Photo credit: Lionel Majzik
.

P.S. Perhaps someone might be interested (if it's a good idea) to do a separate thread for that (e.g. for photos etc.). E.g. (?) @collinsmark , @Ibix , @OmCheeto , @Tom.G , @davenn , @DennisN , @Andy Resnick , @pinball1970 , @berkeman , @Astranut , @Drakkith etc., or other ... (?). Or we can all perhaps post in "Our Beatiful Universe – Photos and Videos" thread (e.g. for photos of the comet as time goes by etc.) ... (?).
 
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  • #392
[Th. Jan. 9, 2025 & > ...]

MARS IS ABOUT TO VANISH: When the sun goes down tonight, step outside and look up. An alignment of the brightest planets is underway in the evening sky. On Monday, Jan. 13th, Mars will vanish from the group during a must-see lunar occultation visible throughout North America.

33e21bab-8a4f-f03c-f9c5-4eadef0532b5.jpg
Above: A similar lunar occultation of Mars on Dec. 7, 2022, photographed by Matthew Melnyk in Calgary, Alberta.
.
 
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  • #393
(for Sat. Jan. 11)
SUNGRAZING COMET AT DAWN: Comet ATLAS (C/2024 G3) is brightening dramatically as it falls toward the sun for a close encounter on Monday [Jan 13]. Today [Sat. Jan 11], many astronomers saw the comet at dawn and one even photographed it in broad daylight.

0aa3d400-4777-9616-07c7-fd12d30976ea.jpg
Above: Comet ATLAS at sunrise over Slovakia on Jan. 11, 2025. Credit: Petr Horálek, who also saw the comet with his naked eyes.
.
 
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  • #394
SUNSET COMET ALERT: Comet ATLAS (C/2024 G3) survived yesterday's close encounter with the sun, and now it is emerging into the sunset sky bright and intact. Amateur astronomers are photographing the comet in some cases less than 10 minutes after sunset.

79856f9e-c1f1-e191-d141-bbe5daca04ca.png
Above: Comet ATLAS at sunset on Jan. 14, 2025. Credit: Erik Norlund of Alberone di Cento, Italy.
.
 
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  • #395
GOOD NEWS AND BAD NEWS ABOUT COMET ATLAS: Comet ATLAS just emerged into the evening skies of the southern hemisphere, wowing observers with its unexpected naked-eye brightness. At the same time, the comet may have just disintegrated. Southern sky watchers should be alert for a "headless wonder" in the nights ahead.

c81c3a60-12e6-b1e6-9dc9-13f0c09546bd.jpg
Above: Comet ATLAS (C/2024 G3) over Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, on Jan. 19th. Credit: Daniel Mello.
.
 
  • #396
Some review (or important missed) from 2024:

1.
This was from Dec. 9, 2024 :

GEOMAGNETIC STORMS ARE DRIVING FARMERS CRAZY: Geomagnetic storms are affecting a segment of the population not usually associated with space weather: Farmers. At least three times in 2024, tractors and harvesters veered off course or stopped working altogether when CMEs struck Earth.

4f5a352f-9ed9-07be-16ea-4e5a3df89a73.jpg
Above: A tractor stopped in its tracks during the May 10, 2024, superstorm. Credit: O'Conner Family Farms in Minnesota.

2. (Nov. 25, 2024)
MYSTERIOUS BLUE FLASHES FROM AVALANCHES: Astrophotographers in China have just reported something potentially new and mysterious: Blue lights from avalanches. The phenomenon has been recorded on at least two different mountains during long-exposure shots of the night sky.

23fac521-72f3-b11f-cbdf-cfcb46c481bb.jpg
Above: An example of a blue flash from an avalanche on Mount Xiannairi in Sichuan, China. Credit: Shengyu Li

3. (Nov. 15, 2024)
A PURE SINE WAVE IN EARTH'S MAGNETIC FIELD: Earth's magnetic field did something unusual on Oct. 10th. During one of the biggest geomagnetic storms of the current solar cycle, a pure sine wave rippled through the magnetosphere, hiding in the riot of the storm. A citizen scientist in England recorded the phenomenon using a DIY magnetometer.

fbda4c0b-c593-6d28-6ab0-b298b06e9f86.jpg
Above: A pure sine wave hiding in the magnetic riot of a severe geomagnetic storm on Oct. 10, 2024. Credit: Stuart Green of Lancashire, England.

4. (Nov. 4, 2024)
SOLAR MAX IN THE SUN'S SOUTHERN HEMISPHERE: Solar physicists have long known that the two hemispheres of the sun don't always operate in sync. Right now, in fact, the sun's southern hemisphere is producing three times more sunspots than the north. This raises the possibility that only one half of the sun is fully experiencing Solar Max, with the other half yet to come.

c64abe41-cb49-20b1-7537-6a922844aadf.jpg
Above: A composite image of sunspots in Oct. 2024 shows a strong north-south assymetry.
...
[& compare (for a contradicted prediction or what could have been, but didn't) the precursor of it (in review) as seen already on Oct. 2, 2023 ... – however, this/such phenomenon is that way (better) demonstrated as apparently non rare ... ] :

5. (Oct. 2, 2023)
ONE HALF OF THE SUN IS MORE ACTIVE THAN THE OTHER: September's sunspot counts reveal a growing asymmetry between the sun's two hemispheres, with the north outperforming the south by a 2-to-1 ratio. This could mean that the sun's north will reach Solar Max before the south, creating a double-peaked solar cycle.
...
7ff9c423-a97c-a572-ba7e-7afd2ed5ca5f.jpg
Above: This composite of September's sunspots shows a strong north-south asymmetry. Credit: NASA/SDO and Senol Sanli
...
 
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  • #398
SUBJ: ASWFC GEOMAGNETIC DISTURBANCE WARNING 25/06
ISSUED AT 2226UT/29 JANUARY 2025
BY THE AUSTRALIAN SPACE WEATHER FORECASTING CENTRE.

G1 periods may be experienced from late in the UT day on 31-Jan
due to coronal hole high speed solar wind streams from a pair
of coronal holes.

INCREASED GEOMAGNETIC ACTIVITY EXPECTED
DUE TO CORONAL HOLE HIGH SPEED WIND STREAM
FROM 31 JANUARY 2025 TO 01 FEBRUARY 2025
_____________________________________________________________

GEOMAGNETIC ACTIVITY FORECAST
31 Jan: G0, chance G1 late in UT day
01 Feb: G0-G1

-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

This is a really big Coronal Hole and is going to be quite geo-effective

1738212112401.png



Cheers
Dave
 
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  • #399
Looks more like a Halloween prank!:wink::wink:
 
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  • #400
BIG SUNSPOT ALERT: A sunspot complex more than 500,000 km wide is crossing the solar disk and crackling with solar flares. In the past 24 hours alone there has been one near-X flare and a half-a-dozen shortwave radio blackouts. This sets the stage for a week of potentially high solar activity.
 
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  • #401
Another huge Earth facing Coronal Hole.
Should cause some auroral activity, approx. 8 - 10th Feb, from the highspeed stream of Solar wind coming from it.
1738961896534.png
 
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  • #402
This is referring to that huge coronal hole image in my last post


SUBJ: ASWFC GEOMAGNETIC DISTURBANCE WARNING 25/08
ISSUED AT 0505UT/09 FEBRUARY 2025
BY THE AUSTRALIAN SPACE WEATHER FORECASTING CENTRE.

A large equatorial coronal hole is rotating towards a geoeffective
position and will likely lead to an increase in solar wind speed
and an enhancement in the interplanetary magnetic field over
10-11 Feb.

INCREASED GEOMAGNETIC ACTIVITY EXPECTED
DUE TO CORONAL HOLE HIGH SPEED WIND STREAM
FROM 10-11 FEBRUARY 2025
_____________________________________________________________

GEOMAGNETIC ACTIVITY FORECAST
10 Feb: G0-G1
11 Feb: G0-G1
 
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  • #403
"SOLAR MAX -- IS A SECOND PEAK COMING? Last October, NOAA and NASA announced that Solar Max has arrived. Only half the sun got the memo. The majority of solar activity has been happening in just one of the sun's hemispheres--the south. The solar superstorm of May 10, 2024, for instance, was caused by a monster southern sunspot.

It makes you wonder, is the other half of Solar Max still coming? This plot of hemispheric sunspot numbers from SILSO provides some context:

hemispheric_silso_strip.png


Here we see all seven solar cycles of the Space Age, punctuated by current Solar Cycle 25 on the far right. The most recent cycles are double peaked, with northern sunspots (green) and southern sunspots (red) reaching their own Solar Max ~two years apart. This isn't big news. Researchers have long known that the two hemispheres of the sun are slightly out of sync. The north vs. south delay is called the "Gnevyshev gap."

This composite image of last year's sunspots shows how dominant the southern hemisphere has been:

hemispheric_strip.png

For forecasters of the solar cycle, this raises an interesting possibility: Maybe the northern peak is still coming. Indeed, there are signs in February 2025 that the pendulum is swinging. This month's sunspots have been more evenly distributed between the two hemispheres, a sign that activity may be shifting north.

On the other hand, the northern peak might have already occured. Take another look at the first plot. There is a puny northern peak near the beginning of Solar Cycle 25. Perhaps that was it. (Indeed, that would jibe with the north-first, south-second order of recent double peaks.)

This discussion focuses attention on the north-south balance of sunspots. A northern shift in the months ahead could herald a second peak and another year or two of excellent auroras before Solar Cycle 25 finally peters out."
(see also post #396 earlier above ...)
 
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  • #404
A 'CIR' JUST HIT EARTH: A co-rotating interaction region (CIR) hit Earth on March 8th, sparking 10 hours of geomagnetic storms. Sky watchers saw auroras in Iceland, Canada and the USA as far south as Colorado and Utah.

33755446-cc04-061e-433c-6cab1c538044.jpg
Above: CIR auroras over Minnesota on March 8, 2025. Credit: Anna Eastman
.
 
  • #405
STRONG GEOMAGNETIC STORM WATCH: NOAA forecasters have issued a watch for strong G3-class geomagnetic storms on March 23rd when a CME is expected to hit Earth. The Russell-McPherron effect could amplify the effectiveness of the impact, producing widespread equinox auroras.
bc7c524c-7407-033d-45fa-da6e52ad34bf.jpg
Above: Equinox auroras over Luosto, Finland, on March 20th. "Thanks to the Russell-McPherron effect, the aurora showed up nicely," reports photographer Zoltán Kolláth.
 
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  • #406
" CME ARRIVES, BUT NO STRONG STORM: Arriving almost 24 hours late, a CME hit Earth's magnetic field on March 24th at 0038 UTC. The overdue impact did not cause a strong geomagnetic storm, as had been predicted. There is still a chance of minor G1-class storms today and tomorrow as Earth passes through the CME's magnetized wake.

A HOLE IN THE SUN'S ATMOSPHERE: A large hole has opened in the sun's atmosphere and it is releasing a stream of solar wind directly toward Earth. NASA's Solar Dynamics Observatory (SDO) is tracking the structure, which spans much of the sun's southern hemisphere:

ch_strip.jpg

This is a "coronal hole"--a vast region in the sun's corona where the magnetic field has opened up, allowing solar wind to escape. It looks dark in SDO images because hot glowing gas normally contained there is missing. It's on its way to Earth.

NOAA forecasters say that a G2-class geomagnetic storm is possible when the leading edge of the solar stream reaches Earth, possibly as early as March 25th."
 
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  • #407
STRONG GEOMAGNETIC STORM (NOW): A strong G3-class geomagnetic storm is underway on April 16th following the arrival of a "cannibal CME." If current conditions persist, auroras could become visible across Canada and northern-tier US states during the night of April 16-17.

d844278d-44fb-6f90-4e12-985985cc71c5.jpg
Above: "Extreme Aurora Borealis conditions" in the Faroe Islands at midnight on April 15-16. Photo credit: Kristian E. Zachariasen
.
 
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  • #408
Finally, that above announced/predicted solar storm briefly became category G4 (severe) [on April 16th] ...

Now, April 18, 2025 :

" GEOMAGNETIC GROUND CURRENTS IN NORTH AMERICA: Space weather doesn't only happen in the sky. It's in the ground, too. On April 16th, a severe geomagnetic storm caused electricity to flow through the rocks and soil of North America. Red zones in this animated map from NOAA show where voltages were greatest:

gic_anim_crop_strip.gif

This 10-minute animation shows North American ground currents at the apex of the April 16th G4 geomagnetic storm​

Geoelectric voltages were more than 70 times normal in the Appalachian mountain range, northern Minnesota, and northwestern Canada. Texas and other western US states were relatively unscathed.

Researchers track ground currents because in extreme cases they can cause power outages like the Great Québec Blackout of March 13, 1989. This week's storm wasn't intense or long-lasting enough to bring down power grids, but NOAA's maps show where power stations are most vulnerable.

"Generally, geoelectric amplitudes are high over metamorphic rock, such as in the Appalachians and northern Minnesota," explains Jeffrey Love of the US Geological Survey (USGS). "They are usually low over sedimentary rock such as in Texas and northwest of the Appalachians."

Realtime electric field maps are published 24/7 on the NOAA website. During the next geomagnetic storm, click here to see what’s happening underfoot! "
 
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  • #409
Massive coronal hole in the Sun's southern hemisphere is now in a geo-effective location. Solar wind spewing out of the hole is likely to strike Earth between April 22 to 24th

250419fe hires.gif
 
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  • #410
davenn said:
Massive coronal hole in the Sun's southern hemisphere is now in a geo-effective location. Solar wind spewing out of the hole is likely to strike Earth between April 22 to 24th

View attachment 360105
The solar wind from that coronal hole sparked these "tie dye" auroras over Fairbanks, Alaska:

tiedie_strip.jpg

"The twilight skies of spring bring about some of the most beautiful pink and purple colors," says photographer Sacha Layos. "We are nearly out of skies dark enough for aurora. If this was the end of the season, it was a great one!"
 
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  • #411
The Solar Wind is/was still elevated (over 500Km/sec) on April 24.

At the same time, 2 very interesting subjects posted:

" FARMERS, DID YOUR TRACTORS JUST GO CRAZY? Many modern farmers use GPS-guided tractors to plant and tend their crops. Last weekend, some of them veered off course. We've received a report of "dancing tractors" on Easter Sunday (April 20, 2025) apparently due to unusual GPS errors. The same thing happened on hundreds of farms last May during a severe geomagnetic storm. There was no geomagnetic storm on April 20, 2025, so we're looking for confirmaton. If you're a farmer or GPS operator and know of unusual disturbances in the past week, please let us know.

THE STARLINK INCIDENT IS NOT WHAT WE THOUGHT: It never made sense. On Feb. 3rd, 2022, SpaceX launched a batch of 49 Starlinks to low-Earth orbit--something they had done many times before. This time was different, though. Almost immediately, dozens of the new satellites began to fall out of the sky.

meteorshower_strip.jpg

Above: A Starlink satellite falls from the sky over Puerto Rico on Feb. 7, 2022. [video]​

At the time, SpaceX offered this explanation: "Unfortunately, the satellites deployed on Thursday (Feb. 3rd) were significantly impacted by a geomagnetic storm on Friday, (Feb. 4th)."

A more accurate statement might have read "...impacted by a very minor geomagnetic storm." The satellites flew into a storm that barely registered on NOAA scales: It was a G1, the weakest possible, unlikely to cause a mass decay of satellites. Something about "The Starlink Incident" was not adding up.

Space scientists Scott McIntosh and Robert Leamon of Lynker Space, Inc., have a new and different idea: "The Terminator did it," says McIntosh.

Not to be confused with the killer robot, McIntosh's Terminator is an event on the sun that helps explain the mysterious progression of solar cycles. Four centuries after Galileo discovered sunspots, researchers still cannot accurately predict the timing and strength of the sun's 11-year solar cycle. Even "11 years" isn't real; observed cycles vary from less than 9 years to more than 14 years long.

terminators.gif

Above: Oppositely charged bands of magnetism march toward the sun's equator where they "terminate" one another, kickstarting the next solar cycle. [more]​

McIntosh and Leamon realized that forecasters had been overlooking something. There is a moment that happens every 11 years or so when opposing magnetic fields from the sun's previous and upcoming solar cycles collide. They called this moment, which signals the death of the old cycle, "The Termination Event."

After a Termination Event, the sun roars to life–"like a hot stove where someone suddenly turns the burner on," McIntosh likes to say. Solar ultraviolet radiation abruptly jumps to a higher level, heating the upper atmosphere and dramatically increasing aerodynamic drag on satellites.

This plot supports what McIntosh and Leamon are saying:

reentry_mod3_strip.jpg

The histogram shows the number of objects falling out of Earth orbit each year since 1975. Vertical dashed lines mark Termination Events. There's an uptick in satellite decay around the time of every Terminator, none bigger than 2022.

As SpaceX was assembling the doomed Starlinks of Group 4-7 in early 2022, they had no idea that the Terminator Event had, in fact, just happened. Unwittingly, they launched the satellites into a radically altered near-space environment. "Some of our satellite partners said it was just pea soup up there," says Leamon.

SpaceX wasn't the only company hit hard. Capella Space also struggled in 2022 to keep its constellation of Synthetic Aperture Radar (SAR) satellites in orbit.

“The atmospheric density in low Earth orbit was 2 to 3 times more than expected,” wrote Capella Space's Scott Shambaugh in a paper entitled Doing Battle With the Sun. “This increase in drag threatened to prematurely de-orbit some of our spacecraft." Indeed, many did deorbit earlier than their 3-year design lifetimes.

The Terminator did it? It makes more sense than a tiny storm. "
 
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  • #412
Stavros Kiri said:
The solar wind from that coronal hole sparked these "tie dye" auroras over Fairbanks, Alaska:


"The twilight skies of spring bring about some of the most beautiful pink and purple colors," says photographer Sacha Layos. "We are nearly out of skies dark enough for aurora. If this was the end of the season, it was a great one!"

I saw that photo on facebook a few days ago
So very misleading
I hope you realise that is cloud being lit up by the aurora behind it ?
 
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  • #413
hey solar watchers
The return of that very large coronal hole around the southeast limb of the sun can be seen.
This last was geo-effective about 2-3 weeks ago and will be geo-effective in a few days time.
Approx the 16 - 18th May so those in higher latitudes, 40 deg north or south and higher,
keep an eye on the night time skies.

cheers
Dave
1747215831179.webp
 
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  • #414
a couple of X class flares over the last 48 hours - 13 and 14th of May 2025

13th - a X1.2 just over the west limb from the large spot group that has left the face of the disk a couple
of days ago. and today the 14th a X2.7 from a new group that has just come around the east limb over
the last 24 hours.
Below is a hydrogen alpha filter image showing the very bright flare just north of the solar equator,
near the east limb.
The big loop to the upper left on the east limb is an unrelated large prominence.
There are a number of large and small dark filaments visible across the solar disk

cheers
Dave

20250514 0821UT GONG X2.7 Flr.webp
 
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  • #415
Heads up for those at higher latitudes + or - 40 Deg....
Get ya cameras ready!!

This halo CME was generated by a M8.2 flare that was pretty much face on to Earth. It will take 24 - 28 hours to get here

SUBJ: ASWFC GEOMAGNETIC DISTURBANCE WARNING 25/40
ISSUED AT 0621UT/31 MAY 2025
BY THE AUSTRALIAN SPACE WEATHER FORECASTING CENTRE.

A fast, halo CME was recently observed leaving the Sun headed
for Earth. This CME is anticipated to arrive on 01-Jun at around
2100UT +/- 8 hours.

INCREASED GEOMAGNETIC ACTIVITY EXPECTED
DUE TO CORONAL MASS EJECTION
FROM 01-03 JUNE 2025
_____________________________________________________________

GEOMAGNETIC ACTIVITY FORECAST
01 Jun: G3-G4, at the end of the UT day.
02 Jun: G4
03 Jun: G2-G3

Australian Space Weather Forecasting Centre
Bureau of Meteorology
ASWFC@bom.gov.au
www.bom.gov.au | www.sws.bom.gov.au
 
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  • #416
Another large coronal home is now geo-effective
prepare for more more aurora

1749065334071.webp
 
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  • #417
That large coronal hole in my above post has become a huge one on this solar rotation
It's now geoeffective and is likely to produce some significant space weather and geomagnetic
storming with assoc. auroral activity
latest_1024_0193.webp
 
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  • #418
Yet another large coronal hole is now becoming geoeffective and is likely to produce some significant space weather and geomagnetic storming with assoc. auroral activity

latest_1024_0193.webp
 
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  • #419
That large coronal hole, in my above post #417, is still huge on this solar rotation.
With one "tendril" reaching up past the solar equator.
It's now geoeffective and is likely to produce some significant space weather and geomagnetic
storming with assoc. auroral activity
It is one of 2 large, southern Hemisphere, coronal holes that are "chasing" each other around the
the sun over the last several months.

250712fe hires.gif
 
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  • #420
Our old friend, the large southern hemisphere coronal hole, is coming back around again.
Be prepared for some more high latitude aurora in the coming days.

latest_1024_0193.webp
 
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