The Sun Unleashes Coronal Mass Ejection At Earth 220
astroengine writes "Yesterday morning, at 08:55 UT, NASA's Solar Dynamics Observatory detected a C3-class flare erupt inside a sunspot cluster. 100,000 kilometers away, deep within the solar atmosphere (the corona), an extended magnetic field filled with cool plasma forming a dark ribbon across the face of the sun (a feature known as a 'filament') erupted at the exact same time. It seems very likely that both eruptions were connected after a powerful shock wave produced by the flare destabilized the filament, causing the eruption. A second solar observatory, the Solar and Heliospheric Observatory, then spotted a huge coronal mass ejection blast into space, straight in the direction of Earth. Solar physicists have calculated that this magnetic bubble filled with energetic particles should hit Earth on August 3, so look out for some intense aurorae — a solar storm is coming."
Astroporn (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Astroporn (Score:5, Funny)
You're a jackass.
I just had to explain to my coworkers, including my female boss, why I laughed hard enough to snort iced tea all down my shirt. Trying to explain an astronomy joke to normals is one thing, but tying it into in a weird, totally NSFW Japanese fetish? She'll be glaring at me suspiciously all month.
Might as well get started on my resume....
Re:Astroporn (Score:4, Insightful)
There is this wonderful thing, called lying like a cheap rug, that would have helped you out there.
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But you have a point. This is why I am not a lawyer or a politician.
Yep, you have to be a good liar and a sociopath to be one of those.
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Both. Politicians are just another group of lawyers, with more experience. Lawyers typically start out as lawyers, and later advance to become either judges or politicians. Since a lawyer's entire job is to lie and twist the truth, and his entire training is about this, it should be little surprise that our society is so screwed up with the entire judicial system is populated by lawyers, as is the government.
Re:Astroporn (Score:5, Funny)
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Sun Ejection?! (Score:2, Funny)
Re:Sun Ejection?! (Score:4, Funny)
Are you trying to say:
"Here cums the sun?"
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Why not just go the whole way and say that the sun is ejaculating a coronal mass?
It's an appropriate word for this situation; it's only been recently that ejaculation has been more commonly associated with semen.
So should I unplug all my stuff or not? (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:So should I unplug all my stuff or not? (Score:5, Funny)
actually, i kind of hope it is!
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I *reallly* hope it's all nothing and not this http://science.nasa.gov/science-news/science-at-nasa/2009/21jan_severespaceweather/ [nasa.gov]
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If this isn't on the scale of the Solar Superstorm of 1859, then we're probably fine.
And it's probably not on that scale, because if it was, then it probably would have hit days before Slashdot heard about it.
On a side note, it's gonna be lulz if tomorrow's day of the TeraGrid conference is affected by this. There's a programming contest scheduled for tomorrow, so we need computers and networking. :D
Re:So should I unplug all my stuff or not? (Score:4, Informative)
Before anyone gets all pissy... yes, the CME comes in the form of energized protons and pico-wave X-Rays, so they are more destructive to human tissue than normal sunlight. But given that the Earth survived a Y+ level (1000-10,000 times more powerful) in 1859 with no one keeling over dead, I think we're safe.
Re:So should I unplug all my stuff or not? (Score:5, Informative)
Re:So should I unplug all my stuff or not? (Score:5, Funny)
Not to be pedantic, but telegraph operators did drop dead during the Carrington Flare, if only because they were more or less attached to massive "antennas."
Moreover, the usual threat of solar storms is not radiation to people, but to the radio equipment that makes modern life possible. This one should only graze the
One should hope that bqt421 wasn't attached to massive "antennas" while posting this message.
Re:So should I unplug all my stuff or not? (Score:5, Funny)
Heart stopped... death... comes swiftly... Must... hit... Submit!
Re:So should I unplug all my stuff or not? (Score:5, Funny)
oblig. (Score:2)
Maybe he was dictating?
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Heart stopped... death... comes swiftly... Must... hit... Submit!
Actually, you need to hit Preview first. This shows even more dedication.
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Oh, quite probably they were hooked up to the entire NASA Deep Space communications antennas.
Re:So should I unplug all my stuff or not? (Score:5, Interesting)
The carrington flare was an X class flare, two classes above this C class (out of three) flare. And it's near the bottom of the C class scale as well, a C-2. This is like interupting your normally scheduled program to report that there was a 2.0 earthquake in Los Angeles county... the rural portion.
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Re:So should I unplug all my stuff or not? (Score:5, Insightful)
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Do not eat the radioactive snow.
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See? Is fun to overhype normal events. Is somewhat like April 1st, but can be practiced all the year.
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You need to upgrade to a lead foil hat from the usual tin foil noggin protector to stop the cosmic rays from discombobulating your brain cells.
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Don't need to mine are pre-discombobulating from my cell phone.
This is not news...or news-worthy (Score:5, Informative)
Here are the classifications, and a C3 means few if any noticeable impact on Earth. It is the X class flares that we need to be concerned about:
http://www.spaceweather.com/glossary/flareclasses.html [spaceweather.com]
Re:This is not news...or news-worthy (Score:5, Interesting)
I actually found this far more interesting. Apparently the sunspot that created the intial flare is large enough it can be spotted with the naked eye. This sunspot is huge.
http://spaceweather.com/ [spaceweather.com]
Image of the sunspot in question: http://spaceweather.com/swpod2010/02aug10/Oleg-Toumilovitch1_strip.jpg [spaceweather.com]
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Do not look directly into the sun with remaining eye.....
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Well normally the sun does this quite regularly (it has been pretty quiet in recent years), but the Earth is a tiny speck in a great big sphere of space so it usually doesn't come directly at us.
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The article says it's actually a C-2, not C3. They go in order from C class, the smallest, M class, Medium, and X class, the largest. C and M class go up to 9 or 10, but X class events have been rated up to 28. The numbers are on a logarithmic scale like Earthquakes are. The ones you read about causing Northern Lights as far south as Texas and lighting telegraph paper on fire, sparking wires etc are X class.
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The story is not the flare itself, it is the sensory system which spotted it. They've been developing these activity sensors for years, and now it is starting to give results.
This is the space version of Hurricane tracking technology. While not every tropical wave that comes off of africa becomes another Katrina, we need to watch all of them for the one which does.
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I realise I'm not the sharpest spoon in the drawer, but I'm fairly certain waves do not become hurricanes ...
That means I don't have to pay rent! (Score:2)
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clarification requested. (Score:3, Interesting)
sooo are you saying i should check out the sweet sunset that evening, or prepare for oblivion, or put on some sunscreen, or what? i beg your pardon, i'm just not sure what the proper reaction is when a huge coronal mass ejection blasts a magnetic bubble filled with energetic particles at me.
Re:clarification requested. (Score:4, Informative)
Re:clarification requested. (Score:5, Funny)
sooo are you saying i should check out the sweet sunset that evening, or prepare for oblivion, or put on some sunscreen, or what? i beg your pardon, i'm just not sure what the proper reaction is when a huge coronal mass ejection blasts a magnetic bubble filled with energetic particles at me.
All organic life in the Northern Hemisphere is disintegrated at the subatomic level, Pacific Ocean boils away, Indian Ocean freezes solid, everybody in Uganda gets superpowers.
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As usual...
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Curling?
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The moon will also be knocked out of it's orbit, sending the doomed crew of British and American astronauts living at Moonbase Alpha hurtling through space and time, only to suffer horrible deaths at the hands of television executives a scant 48 episodes later.
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Didn't that happen 11 years ago?
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Try to imagine all life as you know it stopping instantaneously and every molecule in your body exploding at the speed of light.
I'm sure this will work (Score:3, Funny)
If we can land on this coronal-flare and drill a hole into it. Carefully placing a nuke inside the hole, we can divert it so that both halves will miss the earth and everything will be OK.
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That's silly. The flare will hit us, so we should prepare on the assumption that the intense magnetic forces will stop the core from spinning. We need some kind of tunneling machine, a lot of nuclear bombs, and perhaps some attractive people to undertake a mission to blow the crap out of the core.
Free Aurora Alerts (Score:5, Informative)
If you want a warning when auroras are likely to be occuring without paying Spaceweather for alerts (so you can scurry outside and look), check out the NOAA's SWPC mailing lists [noaa.gov]. Go for the K-Index lists, and sign up for all those that apply for your location.
To figure out which minimum k-index results in visible aurora from your location, check out this helpful page [berkeley.edu]; just enter in your latitude and longitude, and it'll give you your "magnetic latitude"; match that up with a k-index using the table, and you know which mailing lists to sign up for.
If your phone does email, you can get the alerts anywhere; if your phone doesn't but your provider has an email-to-sms gateway, you could just forward emails for the same effect. :)
Re:Free Aurora Alerts (Score:4, Informative)
You might also like the Propfire Firefox Add-on [n0hr.com] which will give you SFI, A/K, and SSN in the bottom of your browser.
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While your at it, if you don't know your latitude and longitude you can go to try http://www.travelmath.com/city/Toledo,+OH [travelmath.com]
Q: Does this make me a Karma whore?
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Based on my lat/lon, my magnetic lattitude is 53.2
Which basically means that anything less than 6 probably isn't worth my while to go outside for.
Irony (Score:4, Interesting)
Wouldn't it be ironic if this solar flare knocks SOHO out of commission?
Re:Irony (Score:5, Funny)
No, Alanis, that would just suck.
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It's not ironic in the slightest for a solar-orbiting satellite to get knocked out by a coronal mass ejection. That's exactly what one would expect to happen. There's no reversal of expectations whatsoever, unless you expect that a solar observatory is somehow also a solar defense shield.
Irony is not the most straightforward and expected series of events. SOHO detects mass ejection. SOHO gets hit by it. SOHO dies.
Irony is you linking to a post that actually proves my point, but then points out what a d
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Wouldn't it be ironic if this solar flare knocks SOHO out of commission?
Only if it were to blow up a bus carrying the Phoenix Suns, on a Sunday.
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Yes, if the Solar and Heliospheric Observatory (SOHO) were knocked out of commission by a exactly the kind of phenomenon it is intended to observe, that would be ironic.
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Well, not significantly more so than Swift nearly getting blinded by a gamma ray burst, surely. And once something becomes routine, can it really be called ironic any more? (Hey, California considers three strikes ever to be good enough, this is two in the same year!)
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Something made out of iron?
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RIP Jeanne Robinson
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Neither. It's one of those solar flares that might cause some mildly entertaining Northern Lights.
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Nonono. The moon wasn't knocked out of orbit by a solar flare, it was the nuclear waste dump exploding after a build-up of magnetic radiation. I have the pilot episode of Space: 1999 if you don't believe me!
Solar flares (Score:2, Funny)
So this is like a cosmic string? (Score:2)
Having RTFA (Score:3, Informative)
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It's also about time to lay the groundwork for the "is the world going to end? Find out at 11!" stories that will run throughout 2012. At least one of the theories has the solar maximum playing some part and that doesn't work if people aren't aware that the sun shoots crap at us from time to time.
We're all going to DIIIIEEEEE! (Score:2)
Last call for alcohol!
Straight towards Earth? (Score:3, Insightful)
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I would guess it would be moving in nearly a straight line, after all the sun is the biggest gravity field in the vicinity and its moving away from that so its path won't be curved.
In fact the main effect of the suns gravity would be to slow it down. Bur the since its a Corona it might be accelerating still due to a stuck gas pedal.
Re:Straight towards Earth? (Score:5, Informative)
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So it has to lead us, but not by much... =)
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Considering a typical size of such thing and how fast this one will get here, there's not much of a difference between the two descriptions.
Flash to display pictures (Score:2)
For those extra special pictures, when JPEG just isn't enough.
I just want to know what the aurorae forecast is (Score:2)
How far south will they be visible? Haven't seen an aurora in a very long time.
Aurora pics outside of NYC from the last CME (Score:3, Informative)
http://photo.omnistep.com/aurora11072004/ [omnistep.com]
I heard they were seen as far south as the Carolina's.
erm (Score:3, Informative)
Wow (Score:3, Funny)
I expected a misstep or two with the takeover, but Oracle REALLY screwed up this time!
Knowing (Score:2)
Weird dream I had this morning (Score:3, Funny)
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I would think that a coronal mass ejection hitting the ISS would be much like a tidal wave hitting a twig. It's the atmosphere that diverts the particles, which is what the auroras are. The ISS wouldn't do a whole lot if it were in the path.
Re:space station (Score:5, Funny)
If this were a typical science fiction movie, they would have an astronaut deflect it using a mirror made from a candy wrapper and a tongue depressor. When that, surprisingly, fails, the radiation will strike the Earth, waking Godzilla, who will then proceed to destroy Japan. Since I don't live in Japan, I say let him have his fun.
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Hmmm, what kind of news does an emo astronaut get that only depresses her tongue?
Is it too much to hope that the "New Moon" fad is over?
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Unless they hit Germany and the radioactive wild pigs become sentient, hack into the EU's carbon trading system and make enough money to buy their own Island near the island of Doctor Moreau.
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Can't wait (Score:5, Interesting)
It just means I get to take more pictures like these [flickr.com].
I wrote an application that keeps track of auroral potential WRT photography [jamesblish.com]. It's public domain, and you can get the latest version of the project here [fyngyrz.com]. Linux, OSX. Nothing for windows, sorry. At least, not without substantial linux-like underpinnings. Love to hear about it if you did get it running under windows, of course.
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Re:Flights? (Score:5, Funny)
No.
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> Why would Oracle do something like this?
It's Ellison cleaning out McNealy's office.
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Hello? Did nobody READ the summary?
"100,000 kilometers away" ??????
The sun is about 150 MILLION kilometers away from Earth.
Two events occurred on/around the sun's surface, 100'000km apart. Not 100'000km from us.
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Yes, did you stop paying attention after you misunderstood the words "100,000 kilometers away"?