Today's Solar Flare 107
An anonymous reader writes "X1-class solar flare today (13:30 Universal Time). Still the SOHO spacecraft offers some of the all-time greatest snapshots anywhere on the web. The flare's residual activity would be shown white and at around 9 o'clock position here. There are 3 major categories, each 10 times stronger than the next: X-class flares are big; they are major events that can trigger planet-wide radio blackouts and long-lasting radiation storms. M-class flares are medium-sized; they generally cause brief radio blackouts that affect Earth's polar regions. C-class flares are small with few noticeable consequences here on Earth. If it were headed towards Earth, arrival is usually 48-72 hrs later (this is not coming this way). Future Mars astronauts should take a lead umbrella because one radiation day on Mars is like living at 70,000 feet on Earth." Nature is pretty.
WOW (Score:1)
Re:WOW , size only, not distance... (Score:2, Informative)
Re:WOW , size only, not distance... (Score:1)
Re:WOW , size only, not distance... (Score:1)
Re:WOW , size only, not distance... (Score:1)
Re:WOW , size only, not distance... (Score:2)
I should certainly hope that the Earth is not anywhere near that close. 2/3 of the daytime sky would be pure sun. However, before our Sun goes nova, it will swell up so that about 2/3 of the sky will be sun according to current theories. (Not that any humans would live through the process to watch, barring special environ suits/houses.)
Some museums and campuses have scale models of the solar system including distances. In the cheezier ones, the sun is represented as a painted circle instead of a physical sphere. But even with painted stuff, you can still get a better feel for the scale. The problem is that the outer planets are often way off campus. You have to go hiking around to find them. Some students get pissed when they go hiking for miles only find a little B-B for pluto. (Now that I think about it, maybe it *was* a B-B that some kid shot into the wooden marker. Nobody would know the difference.)
Re:WOW , size only, not distance... (Score:1)
Try this program [sourceforge.net]. Granted, it's a simulator rather than a model, but it's pretty accurate.
Here it is... (Score:1)
Here [mos.org] are details.
Re:WOW , size only, not distance... (Score:1)
Description [hypography.com]
Re:WOW , size only, not distance... (Score:1)
You mean like this one [mos.org]? (scroll down to "A Community Solar System")
Of course it happens today! (Score:3, Funny)
All electronic devices? (Score:5, Funny)
Re:All electronic devices? (Score:1)
all i need now is a decent liquid cooling system.
and no, the earth is not an option
Re:All electronic devices? (Score:1)
Re:Um, info please (Score:2, Informative)
WTF is UT ??? (Score:1)
Re:WTF is UT ??? (Score:1)
MM
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Re:Um, info please (Score:1)
And to top it all off, of the people who usually think there is a 12am and 12pm, 12am is midnight and 12pm is noon, so the chart would be backwards for the majority of the people looking at it.
For those who care, if you are measuring time using anti meridian (am) and post meridian (pm), there's a point when both times are equal, this would be 12 meridian. To make things easier, we call these times noon and midnight.
I recommend everyone visit http://www.usno.navy.mil/ for most time related issues. They'll also help sync your computer's clock.
That explains everything (Score:4, Funny)
Re:That explains everything (Score:2)
No, it is just you're lack of flair.
Not unusual (Score:5, Informative)
Re:Not unusual (Score:1)
Re:Not unusual (Score:1)
Tech Support meets BOFH (Score:1, Funny)
Your probleme is Solar Flares, call back later if the problem persists.
(note, I'm tech support for wireless networking. YAY, less work today!)
And I thought those fools tanning on earth were... (Score:1)
Odd (Score:2)
Strange how all the "plasma" looks somehow connected together.
It does not look like a solar flare, but rather like Mr. Sun sneezed and blew his tupee off.
Re:Odd (Score:1)
Re:Odd (Score:2)
Well, it is not alone [nasa.gov] in that department. My favorite is still the "middle finger nebula" near Eta Coroni (sp?). I want to buy a poster of that, but my wife won't let me put it up.
Re:Odd (OT) (Score:2)
"Chicago Tribune | Chandra Levy found dead
wooded park, a man walking his dog early Wednesday discovered a skull, human
The oddest coincidences you find using search words on the web. Let's make a cult out of it. Even El Ron didn't use coincidences to their full advantage.
Re:Odd (Score:1)
just head yourself back on over to the yahoo chat groups.
Small red dots in space? (Score:2)
I doubt they are stars or distant X-ray sources, because those are usually overwhelmed by the Sun's local radiation. In other words, they often have to turn *down* the sensativity when looking at the Sun (strong filters), but you normally have to turn *up* the sensativity to look at stars or take long exposures. I don't know what wavelength that image is in. It does not look like X-ray nor visible light. I guess infrared or ultraviolet.
Those "star spots" are signal noise I guess, not really actual objects.
M-class overloaded (Score:2)
That could make for some confusion in the Trek world:
"You idiot human! I said find and land on an M-class *planet*, not an M-class flare! [sizzle sizzle]"
That is amazing.. (Score:1)
Holy 802.11b wireless BatMan! (Score:2)
Re:Holy 802.11b wireless BatMan! (Score:1)
Perhaps if you are going to get accused of it, you might as well just have an affair. Pre-emptive sin
Sounds like you wore out the 'solar flare' excuse anyhow, naughty boy.
Predictions (Score:1)
Not the 'Mars Radiation' virus again! (Score:3, Interesting)
Fortunately, astronauts can find the protection they need indoors (from solar storms) ; shelter walls made of lightweight materials provide adequate shielding.
For those needing more on this, go find what you need here [marssociety.org] or, for something a little more cautious and "NASA" here [nasa.gov].
Now only if we can get people to stop running about waving their arms and shouting "The Radiation! The Radiation!" we might get something productive done... Heh! No chance of that I guess, might as well join them...
*waves hands over head, runs about, starts screaming "The Radiation!" and giggling*
Re:Not the 'Mars Radiation' virus again! (Score:1)
Best Editor Comment Ever (Score:1)
No long winded "the world is ending, hide your computer." No inane jokes. There actually is a comment so you know the Slashdot computer didn't just pass it through cause so many people were sending it. Sums it up in 3 words.
Hmm... (Score:2)
Nature is Pretty, DIY (Score:2)
You can actually see sunspots (it'll look kinda like this [nasa.gov], but in grayscale) any time you want by projecting the sun onto paper. Binoculars work well, a telescope works even better.
Aim your binoculars at the sun, without looking into them. If you look into them, you'll only see the steam rise from your eyes as they cook. Put a piece of white paper about 2m away from your binoculars. Cover a lense so only 1 circle shows on the paper. Finally, focus your binoculars to make the remaining circle as crisp as possible. This is easiest when you mount your binoculars on a tripod, but still works by hand.
If you look closely, you'll see the sunspots.
Re:Nature is Pretty, DIY (Score:2)
Mmmmm. Chinese food!
Put a piece of white paper about 2m away from your binoculars. Cover a lense so only 1 circle shows on the paper. Finally, focus your binoculars to make the remaining circle as crisp as possible.
Doesn't that burn the area around the eye-peice. True, it is not a perfect focus at that point, but perhaps hot enough to damage your binocs. The image may sometimes land on the edge of the lense and cook the glue holding it in place, or the grease and dust on the surface of the lens, making it foggy or hard to clean.
I don't know. It sounds a little risky on the equipment if you ask me.
Re:Nature is Pretty, DIY (Score:3, Interesting)
I guess, since binocs transmit 9x% of the light, the power absorption is very low, once you get them adjusted so that the image is going through them. (But as you say, while you are adjusting, the image may briefly get projected on the edges somewhere, which can't be good.)
If you are worried about it, you could use something opaque like heavy paper to reduce the aperture of the objective. Or obtain some neutral density filters.
Another way to observe the sun is with a pinhole camera, although that is a bit more involved.
MM
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FALSE ALARM! No X class flares today! (yet) (Score:3, Informative)
This is the information from SEC (NOAA) [noaa.gov]: Only a few C class events are listed:
0221 UTC C2.8
0955 UTC C8.8
0930 UTC C6.7
You can easily see all the recent events from this plot of solar X-ray flux: [noaa.gov] (updated in real-time)
There was a minor X class flare last friday (as you can see from the plot!). This is what the poster may be refereing to:
8/30/02 1329 UTC X1.5 Sunspot 95
It was a limb event and isn't headed our way. The plot shows there were no X-ray flares today!
X class flares are fairly common (once every 2-3 weeks these days...) Usually they are near the limb or backside events and don't effect us other than a little radio interference. We might see an earth directed one from region 95 in the next few days. (But don't count on it!) If there is an X-ray event indicated by www.spaceweather.com [spaceweather.com], then check this alert page [spacew.com] at Solar Terestrial Dispatch [spacew.com]. These impact predictions are often very accurate! (Only updated if there is a strong earth directed event!)
Re:FALSE ALARM! No X class flares today! (yet) (Score:1)
the cause of the flares... (Score:1)
Possible Extinction event? (Score:2)
Anyone have any idea. I suppose there really isn't much point in worrying about it though
Re:Possible Extinction event? (Score:2)
After billions and billions of years we would of been hit by one by now and wiped out.
There have been at least 3 killer asteriods that have done mass devistation in earth's life time including a recently discovered one that probably wiped out all lifeforms except bacteria about 3 1/2 billion years ago. There are no fossils before the event because whole mountians with the fossilized rock were crushed into sand by 2 mile high waves, which travelled twice the speed of sound, and travelled over and over again untill the energy was dissapated. Even moutains higher then a few miles high(unlikely back then)were to exist, the waves and their speed would easily blow them away into dust. The one after that was about 750 million years ago which wiped out %90 of the earth's lifeforms caused again by giant waves that engulfed most of earth and a mini ice age that followed. Then you all know about the one 65 million years ago which killed the dinosaurs. All the recent asteriods however have been getting smaller and smaller. I do not know if we have just been lucky or if the bigger ones have been getting smacked into smaller ones in space. Also their have been hundreds of tiny asteriods that were powerfull enough to wipe out whole city's and change climate world wide. THey happen every couple thousand years. I wonder how big the tisuami's from those are if they hit the ocean. Yes, asteriods are a threat and we need to take them seriously unlike solar flares.
Re:Possible Extinction event? (Score:1)
We actually had something in that category during this solar-peak; nobody is exactly sure how strong it was, though, because it flooded out all the satellites set to monitor those events for a good while, so the size had to be estimated.
Bottom line is, it had no really observable effects to the Earthlings, even the CME missed us enough that as I recall it wasn't much of an aurora-show. That's why we have the atmosphere, it protects us from lot of cosmic stuff, and even from things out of our own solar system.
Unless you count few mysterious radio/television blackouts as observable effects, ofcourse - though sometimes I suspect most Earthlings would notice that better than if a spaceship landed on their front-yard, so it's all relative...
One type of "solar flare" there is that you probably could worry about; when stars collapse, they shoot immense gamma-bursts off their poles. Were Earth to be caught in the way of such an event from a star in our part of the galaxy, all life (Save for the deepest oceans) here would likely get fried in an instant.
Some scientists theorize this might be the reason of some of the mass-extinctions Earth has seen in its past, from stars far away not to kill everything on their way. Unlike asteroids, there isn't much that could even conceivably be done, though, so it's perhaps one thing better to not worry about.
Back on out own Sun, I think sub-cycles in solar activity might have caused increased mutations during some periods, leading to the creation of new dominant species (Including humans) which have then quickly taken over as conditions have become more stable. In genetic algorithms this is known as "annealing". It might have caused events that to us look like mass-extinctions.
Insightful Quote of the Year (Score:3, Funny)
Old photo (Score:2)
Re:Old photo (Score:1)
Next on the Trinity Broadcast Network... (Score:1)
Realtime movies of last 48 hours (Score:3, Informative)
[nasa.gov]
http://sohowww.nascom.nasa.gov/data/realtime/mp
In particular this:
[nasa.gov]
http://sohowww.nascom.nasa.gov/data/LATEST/curr
is a reasonably small (3Mb) mpeg of the last 48 hours... the flare is right at the end of the sequence. Notice that although it appears on the right limb of the sun first, it's also pretty symetrical - indictating that the thing's coming straight for us.
Incidentally, if you've ever fancies getting your name on a comet, there are people who sit in front of those pages pressing ^r constantly in order to be the first to identify a new sungrazer. No, there's no software sitting processing the images in realtime for comet-like objects, and they (or rather, their ion tails) show up nicely.
Enjoy!
Dumb Question (Score:2)
Re:Dumb Question (Score:2)
Re:Dumb Question (Score:2)
The SOHO [estec.esa.nl] pictures are just beatiful, especially the movies [estec.esa.nl].
I'm not an astronomer, but I think this big one is visible on the "LASCO C2" just around the '11:00' timestamp on Sept 1.
Too bad the EIT movies are not current. I guess it was almighty Murphy who choose this week-end for the flare...
Better then lead would be water (Score:1)