Starting at 02:32 UTC on Sunday January 22, 2011, Sunspot Region 1401 released a C7.1 magnitude Solar Flare. At the time of this post Sunspot Region 1401 is very active and can be seen interacting with it's companion Sunspot Region 1402, magnetically . Keep watch in the following hours for more activity from these Sunspot Regions.
Solar Alerts Monitoring
Sunday, January 22, 2012
C7.1 Flare from Sunspot Region 1401
Starting at 02:32 UTC on Sunday January 22, 2011, Sunspot Region 1401 released a C7.1 magnitude Solar Flare. At the time of this post Sunspot Region 1401 is very active and can be seen interacting with it's companion Sunspot Region 1402, magnetically . Keep watch in the following hours for more activity from these Sunspot Regions.
Saturday, January 21, 2012
Jan 19th CME Arriving Now
Update: Jan 22 @ 23:43 UTC
We are now having a G1 Minor Geomagnetic Storm
Geomagnetic conditions are ongoing
So far, conditions peaked between 10:00-12:00 UTC today. Solar winds topped out at speeds over 450km/sec. Density reached 65.6 protons/cm3
Current Solar Conditions:
Wind Speed: 447.9 km/sec
Density: 19.8 protons/cm3
Solar Storm Level - G1 - Minor
Kp Level is now at Kp5
Update: Jan 22 @ 07:30 UTCWind Speed: 447.9 km/sec
Density: 19.8 protons/cm3
Solar Storm Level - G1 - Minor
Kp Level is now at Kp5
At 0516 UTC Jan 22, 2012 the ACE Spacecraft observed an IP Shock Passage. At 0614 UTC a Geomagnetic Sudden Impulse with a recorded deviation of 31 nT was recorded at the Boulder, CO Magnetometer. At 07:30 UTC The ACE data reads a proton density13.1 p/cc , Solar wind 427.0km/s, the BznT is -29.5, BynT -3.4. We expect this activity to continue throughout the day and will be posting updates.
Watch the CME arrival with us on the nict:
Channel Eruption on West limb - Old Region 1396
Images show the sunspot region of the latest C 2.4 peaking at 13:42 UTC. Seems its the old region 1396 which rotates off the west limb . After and before this flare peaks, we noticed ejections on SDO.
Around 10:00 UTC we can see a CME on STEREO A images that match's with the channel eruption on the west limb.
http://stereo.gsfc.nasa.gov/browse/2012/01/21/ahead_20120121_cor2_512.mpg
CME arrives as expected.
At approximately 04:01 UTC the CME that accompanied the January 16th LDE C 6.5 flare from Sunspot Region 1402 arrived. At 04:01 ACE data showed an increase in proton density from 1.6 P/cc to 8.3P/cc and an uptick in the solar wind from 301.1 K/ps to 343.5 K/ps. This is just the first in a wave of CMEs expected over the next couple of days. This CME is only expected to give a glancing blow, as the majority of it will sweep past Earth in a northward direction. We will be anxiously awaiting the arrival of a larger double CME wave that was associated with the M3.2 LDE on thursday the 19th. The Next CME is expected to arrive Sunday into Monday UTC. Be sure to check back for updates on these developing events.
The original post on this LDE flare and CME can be seen here.
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