As predicted, the first of two coronal mass ejections (CMEs) from the sun produced some good aurora displays last night, as far south as Arizona:
This was taken about the time the NOAA-15 satellite observed a peak activity level of “10” over the Northern Hemisphere.
Here’s a nice photo from Minnesota:
And, where the aurora always seems to be burning up the sky…Fairbanks, Alaska:
From Finland:
And another one from Minnesota (uff da!):
Finally, here’s the source of the CME, sunspot 2158, as photographed by Sergio Castillo a day after it unleashed the “storm”:
Photos courtesy of Spaceweather.com Realtime Image Gallery.
Hopefully, with the second CME event storm arriving today, there could be another good display tonight.
sorry, Doug, but you are beginning to bore me. Besides, you are waaay OT. -Roy
So far only k 5 not very strong and only for 6 hours in duration. I still think we will not exceed k 6 for this event.
Solar prolonged minimum conditions over the long haul are alive and well.
well, Salvatore, NOAA just issued a K = 6 alert:
Space Weather Message Code: WARK06
Serial Number: 246
Issue Time: 2014 Sep 12 1535 UTC
WARNING: Geomagnetic K-Index of 6 expected
Valid From: 2014 Sep 12 1545 UTC
Valid To: 2014 Sep 13 0900 UTC
Warning Condition: Onset
NOAA Scale: G2 – Moderate
NOAA Space Weather Scale descriptions can be found at
http://www.swpc.noaa.gov/NOAAscales
Potential Impacts: Area of impact primarily poleward of 55 degrees Geomagnetic Latitude.
Induced Currents – Power grid fluctuations can occur. High-latitude power systems may experience voltage alarms.
Spacecraft – Satellite orientation irregularities may occur; increased drag on low Earth-orbit satellites is possible.
Radio – HF (high frequency) radio propagation can fade at higher latitudes.
Aurora – Aurora may be seen as low as New York to Wisconsin to Washington state.
c’mon guys, can’t we enjoy the beauty without making everything about global warming?
Roy I said K 6. I said I don’t think it will exceed K6. See earlier post.
It starts from 6.
http://www.swpc.noaa.gov/rt_plots/SatEnv.gif
OK. NOW it’s been upgraded to k=7 (or greater). 😉
Cc’mon guys, can’t we enjoy the beauty without making everything about global
I agree.
Do you know where in Arizona that photo was taken? Curious if it made it to my neighborhood!
Terrific photos – unusual colors, settings, and vantage points.
Glad I dropped by.
I think it will stay at 6.
This is a decrease in GCR almost 9%. There will be confusion in the weather.
http://www.bartol.udel.edu/~pyle/TheSpnPlot.gif
Team drove to Nebraska. After delivering and picking up in Seward and then Lincoln started heading back towards Anderson, IN at 20:00. Looked for the aurora last night while traveling back east on I-80 across Iowa and had no luck. Still too cloudy.
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OMG. Not again. ðŸ™
Hi Roy,
Thank you for the aurora pic’s. I’m using one for my desktop. Great stuff!
Have a great day!
>Dr. Spencer knows about the phrase Uff-da
I knew I liked you for a reason.