X7-class Solar Event Detected 46
SlySpy007 writes "Spaceweather.com is reporting on an enormous solar event which took place earlier this evening. This event, emanating from the gigantic sunspot 720, registered as an X7-class event, and increased the 24-hour probability of a minor geomagnetic storm to 60% in mid-latitudes (70% in high latitudes). The GOES-12 satellite happened to catch this event with its SXI instrument (Solar X-ray Imager), and there's a pretty gnarly animation of the event from 720 over at the SXI site. I know this is gonna cause havoc for plenty of missions in orbit now; wonder if we'll see any disturbance here on terra firma." Another reader points to ground-based monitoring stations detecting a surge in cosmic rays at the time of the flare.
sorry, my bad (Score:2, Funny)
Re:sorry, my bad (Score:3, Funny)
Curses! (Score:2)
God, I hate that movie.
Re:Curses! (Score:2)
Oh no! (Score:3, Funny)
Oh no! Reed Richards, his wife Susan, brother-in-law Johnny, and test pilot Ben Grimm just took off in Dr. Richards' rocketship! They didn't know about the solar storm. I hope they'll be all right!
Re:Oh no! (Score:2)
Re:Oh no! (Score:2)
Still, I did get the joke
Great (Score:1)
Re:Great (Score:2)
Better yet, if the flare can convince Bush and Cheney to resign by the end of the week, I'll believe in whatever you tell me to.
So, if you're a conspiracy theorist, religious nut, psychic, etc, and want an eager follower, just make sure one of the above happens.
Re:Great (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:Great (Score:2)
Really? (Score:1)
And of course you have also noticed that every time you don't have memorable dreams and check the various sun tracking sites, almost without fail you never find that there was some kind of burs
Re:Really? (Score:1)
Well I already said that it's almost every time that I have weird-ass dreams that there's solar activity going on, not every time. Once in a while I'll check the sites and yes... no memorable dreams generally means little/low solar activity.
As they say, correlation does not mean causation, I'm just giving a datapoint. No need to act all superior.
Superior? (Score:1)
No offense intended. Correlation indeed does not mean causation, but it should be more than enough to get the prize--if what you say is true, that is. Her
Re:Great (Score:2)
End Of Story.
The rest is you, yourself, and your interpretation. Are you counting solar activity [what level?] without dreams, or vice versa, in your "coinkydink" correlations?
Don't forget the influence of the moon, biorhythims, and presidential politics!
Re:Great (Score:2)
Around here, we call that "daylight".
Comment removed (Score:4, Funny)
Re:Hmm (Score:2)
Risk assessment? (Score:3, Funny)
Which is the greater risk - leaving our tinfoil hats on and having them focus the effects of this in our brains, or taking them off and subjecting ourselves to mind control from the black helicopter people?
Re:Risk assessment? (Score:3, Funny)
Re:Risk assessment? (Score:2)
Coincidence? (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Coincidence? (Score:2)
Pissed off? (Score:5, Funny)
(It's all about the spin. Karl Rove would be proud of me... and that makes me feel so incredibly dirty right now. Must clean off stain of Bush/Rove appreciation... IT BURNS!!!!)
-Jellisky
Re:Pissed off? (Score:1)
> of me... and that makes me feel so incredibly
> dirty right now. Must clean off stain of
> Bush/Rove appreciation... IT BURNS!!!!)
My eyes! Ze goggles, zey do nothing!
Strange ... (Score:1)
Maybe Something Interesting Tonight? (Score:2)
Good news and bad news (Score:3, Informative)
The bad news is that the aurora borealis caused by this flare was expected to happen Tuesday night or perhaps during the predawn hours Wednesday in North America.
The good news is that the sunspot that produced this flare could produce more major flares before it heads around to the back side of the sun in a few days. So you might still get to see the n
LASCO mpeg (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:LASCO mpeg (Score:2, Insightful)
Damn, this is supposed to be the solar minimum, what the hell is going on here?
Aurora Borealis (Score:1)
Re:Aurora Borealis (Score:1)
www.space.com/spacewatch/aurora_cam.html [space.com]
better animation (SOHO) (Score:3, Informative)
Re:better animation (SOHO) (Score:2)
Solar Flare Effects on Moon base (Score:3, Interesting)
Would someone care to tell Michael... (Score:3, Informative)
...that X7 is a rather moderate eruption? For reference, we routinely see eruptions throughout the solar cycle at least that big, and many which are many times greater. Google around and you'll find an eruption which occurred in November of 2003 which was dubbed the 'biggest solar flare ever recorded'. That was an X28.
More details here: http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/sci/tech/3251481.stm [bbc.co.uk].
X28? how big is it? (Score:1)
so how big IS X28? Is it
Re:X28? how big is it? (Score:1)
logarithmic since the ratio base^28 / base^7
is more that one billion if base = e. A solar
explosion one billion times more powerful
would have turned the sun into a nova star.
Saw The Sunspot (Score:3, Interesting)
I browsed the internet and found out that at that time there was a Sunspot, the size of 7 earths. It was 720.
Cosmic rays (Score:1)