Coronal Mass Ejection Hits Earth 154
astroengine writes "On Tuesday, the Earth was hit by a coronal mass ejection (CME), triggering a 'moderate' geomagnetic storm, igniting aurorae at high latitudes. The CME in question was launched from the sun early on Sunday and space weather scientists predicted its arrival on Aug. 3 — the vast magnetic bubble of solar plasma arrived on schedule."
Don't Give In! (Score:5, Funny)
Damn it, we need to shoot back. Don't let the Sun see us flinch, make sure that we retaliate in kind!
I think we can time travel off of this but have no (Score:2)
I think we can time travel off of this but have no to little control of how far.
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Which is great, the average English class travels at 0.2s/s
Photo of Aurora consequent to CME (Score:5, Interesting)
Took this photo of the aurora [flickr.com] last night in the short window of full darkness before the moon came up.
There will be another shooting opportunity tonight, if the geomagnetic storm continues.
Not Fair (Score:2)
I'm in Fairbanks
We won't see night before the end of August
Auroras just aren't the same in daylight
Can we reschedule this to reoccur around the end of September?
Then we get total darkness early enough to be of use and the temperatures aren't too cold to go outside
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Sorry man, I take 'em when I can get 'em. :)
Here's another shot from last night [flickr.com], if it'll make you feel any better
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That's pretty intense. How close is it to what you you'd see with unaided eyes?
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Not close at all. At my latitude, this storm was a vague glow in the sky; I could see that it was there, and in this case, I could even see a little bit of the detail, but it's just at the edge of vision. The camera, however, can see far more than I can in terms of low light; I used a long exposure, and a wide, light-gathering aperture (like your eye's pupil open wide, only much wider), and turned up the sensitivity of the amplifier on camera's sensor to its maximum in order to capture what you see here.
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Thanks for the info. Where I'm at (near Boston) there's too many trees, hills, houses, and too much light pollution around for anything. I do envy your Big Sky view :)
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You're welcome. WRT the view, yeah... but you have museums, fine dining, aquariums, water parks, theater, concerts, symphonies, conventions, a couple of centuries of fine architecture, the ocean, hills, caves, shopping, clubs and societies, modeling agencies, all manner of service industries and contractors, pizza delivery (and many different variations on pizza), grinder shops... I could go on for hours.
So while there are definitely a few benefits to living here, I think the envy is mostly on the other
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Re:Don't Give In! (Score:4, Funny)
I read this article without my glasses on. I was a bit disturbed that a conjugal mass erection hit the earth.
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thankfully not the erection, just the spooge hit us
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Re:Don't Give In! (Score:5, Funny)
That's not very Christianly of you. What ever happened to "turn the other hemisphere"?
Re:Don't Give In! (Score:5, Funny)
George W Chimpface says:
"Stars like Sol, Sirius, Canopus, and their terrorist allies, constitute an axis of evil, glowing to threaten the dark of the world. The United States will lead a coalition of the willing to blacken it!"
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Quick !!! Dont blink !!! (Score:2)
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Ahh, that explains it. (Score:2, Funny)
I was wondering why my RealDoll with the motorized enhancements seemed extra frisky this morning.
.
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I was wondering why my RealDoll with the motorized enhancements seemed extra frisky this morning. .
Can you please link that site for uh... research purposes?
Awesome. (Score:5, Funny)
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I would think been bukake'd by the sun was a humiliating experience.
Reminds me of a Star Trek: TNG episode... (Score:3, Interesting)
where Dr. Crusher was commanding the Enterprise. She used Dr. Raega's (Farengi scientist) metaphasic shield to enter a star's corona with the Borg in persuit, and then fired the phasers at the star just below the Borg ship.
Moral of the story? Sucks get caught in a CME.
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A CME happened in a Stargate Atlantis episode too.
http://gateworld.net/atlantis/s3/312.shtml [gateworld.net]. Useful info links right above the episode banner.
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Even better, it happened in SG1 here, with added time travel:
http://www.gateworld.net/sg1/s4/406.shtml [gateworld.net]
Re:Reminds me of a Star Trek: TNG episode... (Score:5, Funny)
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Re:Reminds me of a Star Trek: TNG episode... (Score:5, Funny)
I hope you were wearing a condom.
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I don't think condom comes in a size that would fit a sun.
Re:Reminds me of a Star Trek: TNG episode... (Score:5, Funny)
Well, maybe not where *you* shop.
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where Dr. Crusher was commanding the Enterprise.
she wasn't commanding the Enterprise in that episode, just the research team testing that shield thing. she commanded her own ship in the last episode (future) and the Enterprise when she was in another dimension with everyone else dissapearing around her. more adept TNG nerds feel free to correct me.
Induction Magnetometer (Score:5, Informative)
Everyone STOP MOVING! (Score:5, Funny)
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+1 funny
Yeah I thought it was pretty funny too -- someone with mod points must hate Shanrak.
Thank goodness there's no damage (Score:5, Insightful)
However, the bad news is that satellites might go if a bigger storm comes along.
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2. There will be really impressive light displays (which I hope someone will post on YouTube
And what you will do tomorrow with all the blind people and those strange plants chasing them on the street?
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Think I'll head to the coast - maybe I'll be safe at the top of a lighthouse...
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I hear it all the time, but I don't tell anyone.
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So when will the Messiah drop by and explain to us what all this means?
Re:Thank goodness there's no damage (Score:5, Funny)
Steve Jobs is busy with other matters right now, so it could be a while. /s
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A friend of mine is a Mason and he said it's next wednesday at 4:35pm. Unfortunately the Holy Grail will not be available as it's currently in their vaults awaiting re-release after a hiatias to drum up more interest..
I guess the Aliens from area 51 stole the thunder out of seeing the holy grail, and a dumbass in the dayton Ohio Temple drank from it when they last had it and his head melted.
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Ah, the ol' "trick the new guy into drinking from the Grail" bit. "It'll make you immortal! We've all done it! *snicker*"
The Masons haven't been the same since they cracked down on Freshman hazing. :(
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I'm hear, sorry I'm late.
It means that everyone is to learn how to think rationally.
Also, give me your broads.
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Messiah on Slashdot!
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2. There will be really impressive light displays (which I hope someone will post on YouTube
No video (so far) but there are photos at spaceweather.com.
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just cuz im in my nitpick mood, the origin of the word meteorology is already astronomical. It was believed that meteors were part of earths weather system. So I think this new field should be called meteorology, and the old field should be called Geoweatherology... or Global Warming
... oh yeah http://www.bigsiteofamazingfacts.com/why-is-the-study-of-weather-called-meteorology-and-where-did-the-term-come-from [bigsiteofa...gfacts.com]
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um, sort of. it's more accurate to say that "meteor" (in this sense meaning "bright streak in the sky") means "weather thing". so you've kind of got causality reversed there....
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3. We are developing the ability to forecast "space weather", thus leading to a new field, astrometeorology
Aw, great, astrometeorologists, with bad hair pieces and stupid patter.
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Aw, great, astrometeorologists, with bad hair pieces and stupid patter.
He smiles at the camera, then tells a little joke
He always says it's sunny if the telestrator's broke
Thinks clouds are made of cotton and are blown up to the sky,
But he's got a steady income as a TV weather guy
"They say I'm not qualified to be on the TV
Don't know Fahrenheit from Celsius so I just say 'degrees'
I just read the temperature and make up a bunch of lies
and end up being right more than the guy on channel 5."
-- Arrogant Worms
The good and the bad (Score:5, Informative)
The additional bit of good news (if you're a VHF amateur radio operator, or FM or TV broadcast DXer) is that there should be interesting propagation of VHF radio signals [wikipedia.org] refracting off of the aurora [wikipedia.org], perhaps as far as 2000 km. The bad news is that the same ionization that refracts the VHF signals attenuates HF signals, so if you're an HF amateur radio operator or short-wave listener, the paths over the poles will be closed for a few days.
I guess the additional bad news if you're a VHF broadcaster (FM or over-the-air TV) is that you can expect a lot of calls from the public complaining about poor reception, as signals from far away interfere with yours. :-/
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I've always loved the top end of the HF spectrum 10 meters, and the 11 meter "freeband", sometimes it acts like VHF, sometimes HF, sometimes both.
On a side note, how ashamed should I be to say I have a "favorite" portion of the spectrum?
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Did you see the Star-Trek nerdery above? I don't think you have anything to be ashamed of compared to that (unless of course you were one of the participants...)
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...We are developing the ability to forecast "space weather", thus leading to a new field, astrometeorology...
Does this mean we've finally given up on trying to forecast earth weather? Time to start up the The Old Atronaut's Almanac [almanac.com]
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Drat, and here I was thinking that I could add this perfectly legitimate scenario to my BOFH excuse list.
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3.3. We are developing the ability to forecast "space weather", thus leading to a new field, astrometeorology
We've had space weather as a branch of operational meteorology for decades. I can testify to the fact that the US Air Force has performed operational space weather observation, warning, and forecasting missions since the early 1970s.
It was never called "astrometeorology", though. Let's just say that the clever name you suggested will be your contribution to the field.
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You know nothing of this event do you.
You could SEE the fricking sunspot on the sun. at sunrise you could see it with the naked eye. and if you know anything about sunspots you know that they WILL collapse and cause a CME.
You know absolutely nothing about astronomy, stop talking. It's making you look like either Glenn Beck or a Retard...
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It's making you look like either Glenn Beck or a Retard
Rahm Emmanuel posts to slashdot!
Sarah Palin will reply below.
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You know absolutely nothing about astronomy, stop talking. It's making you look like either Glenn Beck or a Retard...
You repeated repeated yourself there. Either that, or you're being mean to retards.
In any case, since sunspots are not mentioned anywhere in the Bible it is clear that this is just some secular humanist hoax. No one can actually predict astronomical events like the aurora, which are caused by God.
How could an auroral display be caused by the sun, anyway? They happen at NIGHT! Duh.
Either that, or this is just one more on the long, long list of "things Science can do that Faith can't," along with curing d
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+5 to intelligence, retard's favor.
And the point of this article is? (Score:1)
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I'd be more interested to know if anyone saw it in their area. I'm around London, Ont. I didn't see any this morning, but my buddy directly across the lake in Michigan did, and a bit further north his friends saw it as well. I'm sure one of these days, when it's not cloudy, humid, raining, snowing, or anything other than a semi-clear sky I'll see them around here. Because every time we have one, it's not really the best viewing weather.
The last time there was a... (Score:4, Funny)
EMP? (Score:2)
Could something like this have the same effect on electronics as an EMP?
Imagine the chaos if all the microprocessors on the planet burned out at once. Or just in one hemisphere.
Re:EMP? (Score:5, Informative)
On the surface, not so much - the magnetosphere funnels those charged particles to the magnetic poles, where they interact with the atmosphere and create the stunning light shows we call auroras. That said, they can induce currents to flow, especially in long lines (think power lines) which can cause circuit breakers to trip, cutting off the grid and causing power outages.
In space, they cause lots of havoc with satellites - ranging from simple loss of communication (moving charged particles generate EM radiation, after all - same ones that cause power outages mentioned above), to complete destruction if it burns out some control circuits. So not only are the electronics rad-hard, but there are shut down protocols to temporarily turn satellites "off" to prevent damage. A dead satellite is a huge cloud of space junk waiting to happen, after all, especially if you can't deorbit it.
Of course, the magnetosphere is supposed to be weakening in time for a supposed pole reversal, in which case life will get pretty interesting.
This CME didn't result in any damage to satellites, though. Not sure if there weren't other effects (power outages, notable) caused, though.
Solar Storm of 1859 (Score:2)
sci-fi novel One Second After (spoiler) (Score:2)
But there were neutrinos in it! (Score:2)
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Just rotate the shields frequency.
What do you mean, Earth has no shields? There's a planetary shields manufacturer in Alpha Centauri.
What do you mean you’ve never been to Alpha Centauri? Oh, for heavens sake mankind, it’s only four light years away, you know.
How about the highlander II one? (Score:2)
How about the highlander II one?
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How about the highlander II?
Highlander 2? That can't exist as there can be only one
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I don't think anybody watched 2012!
(Bit I did enjoy the trailer [youtube.com]).
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I just couldn't go to see it after the spoof trailer that I linked to above. I saw the serious trailer afterwards in the cinema and it was just taking itself so seriously I could barely stop myself from laughing.
How can anyone think that is a documentary? I don't know. Scary thing is, I'm not surprised by that. : (
Hey Oli, what's the weather outlook? (Score:5, Funny)
SPACE WEATHER!!!
We know it's started, but when will it finish? (Score:2)
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OK, who is letting the lolcat post on Slashdot again? :-P
Lame (Score:2)
It was stormy here last night. The only lights in the sky were lightning.
I watched Flash Gordon last night (Score:1, Offtopic)
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The unprecedented solar eclipse is no cause for alarm.
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So... (Score:1)
Computer Crashes (Score:2, Informative)
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No. Sorry, but you can't blame you low grade administration skills on this, nice try~
Yo (Score:3, Funny)
He who smelt it, dealt it.
Signed,
Sol
Hubble *and* the ISS up there... (Score:2)
No Ka-Boom? (Score:3, Funny)
-Marvin.
A serious question (Score:3, Interesting)
So, how much additional mass did the earth obtain? I'm guessing that most of it was hydrogen, but it would be cool to get even a ball park figure.
A few liters (at STP), a few moles, a kilogram, immeasurably small, or much more? Somebody who is more familiar with the field has to have made an estimate. Was it all energy or was mass actually transferred?
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Well, lets take a look.
If we only count the high energy protons from the link, we get a counting rate of over 1/cm^2/sr/s over a day.
If we take the sun as source, we have about 6e-5 sr as a solid angle. The earth has a crossection of about 128 million km^2, = 1.28e16 cm^2.
so if we count the proton mass over 84000 seconds, it will be about 6e16 protons, so total mass is about 100 picogram.
Its not my field, but my guess would be that its negligible compared to normal solar wind. The point that counts is the m
Wow! Celestial Events Follow Expectations! (Score:2)
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Err, there was a post the day before yesterday, here on /. even, that reported the sunspot activity and subsequent prediction for aurorae last night. Guess you missed it.