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X17 Solar Flare Sends 2B Tons of Plasma at Earth

Dr. Zowie writes "This morning a very large solar flare erupted from a large sunspot group that is crossing the face of the Sun. The explosion sent over 2 billion tons of material hurtling across the solar system toward Earth. Movies from the SOHO spacecraft show the flare in UV and the associated coronal mass ejection in visible light as they happened, and the impact of high energy protons that the flare launched at about half the speed of light. NOAA's Space Environment Center shows that the Sun's X-ray brightness went up 100x during the flare. Expect more aurora and geomagnetic effects in the next day or two!"

13 of 473 comments (clear)

  1. For those whose first response is "WTF?" by mandalayx · · Score: 5, Informative
    My first response to the article was "WTF?" but I decided to do something more productive than that. Perhaps you might find this more accessible to you as well:

    The Sun today unleashed what appears to be the third most powerful flare in recorded history, a storm of charged particles that could hit Earth mid-day Wednesday with more effect than any since 1989, when an entire Canadian province had its power knocked out.

    Depending on the storm's magnetic orientation, it could set off a dramatic display of colorful northern lights well into mid-latitudes of the United States and Europe.

    Meanwhile, satellite operators and power grid managers are preparing to endure a potentially damaging event. And astronauts aboard the International Space Station have taken cover from heavier radiation sent out by the flare. They are not expected to be in any serious danger.

    Kicked up at 6 a.m. EST (1100 UT) today, the major solar outburst comes on the heels of four other flares late last week and over the weekend. All were considered fairly severe, but the latest eruption makes the others seem like solar sneezes.

    Today's blast is classified as an X17, where X denotes a major flare and larger numbers are stronger. That compares to two flare-ups over the weekend that were rated less than X2.

    "The flare today may be the third strongest X-flare on record," said Paal Brekke, deputy project scientist for the SOHO spacecraft, which first spotted the event.

    A slightly stronger flare on April 2, 2001 was not pointed at Earth. Today's storm is headed directly at us and could generate fantastic colorful lights in the atmosphere, known as aurora. The storm associated with the flare is called a coronal mass ejection, an expanding bubble of charged particles that race outward.

    more
  2. Helpdesk Excuse-of-the-Day by Vinson+Massif · · Score: 5, Funny

    Sunspots.

    --
    "Remember, any tool can be the right tool." -- Red Green
  3. Astronomy is fun by pheared · · Score: 5, Funny

    Skinner: Ah, there's nothing more exciting than science. You get all
    the fun of sitting still, being quiet, writing down numbers,
    paying attention...[chuckles] Science has it all.

  4. Great... by Eric_Cartman_South_P · · Score: 5, Funny
    Now we can expect a lot more of those lame "no carrier" posts on Wed. Although for once, they could be for real since the interf32#@a#%$ATDT01[NO CARRIER]

  5. Braak out the RJ-45!!! by grocer · · Score: 5, Funny

    Time to find the ethernet cables and plug in all those wireless laptops...

    No 802.11b, 1 year!

  6. next day or two? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Interesting

    Why next day or two? At the half of speed of light, this stuff should hit us in about 16 minutes. So you can't really "prepare" for something like this. What am I missing?

    1. Re:next day or two? by Donwulff · · Score: 5, Informative

      They had an odd way of putting this. The proton flare caused a solar storm which hit Earth within minutes of the flare commencing. However, the associated CME is significantly slower (Still over 2000 kilometers per second) and will hit within hours. The CME will have higher total energy and is what will cause fluctuations in the gemmagnetic field, ie. a gemomagnetic storm. "Next day or two" is probably because they didn't know this was a high-speed event yet.

  7. Way cool... by Kr3m3Puff · · Score: 5, Insightful
    I have to just admit the awe I have in watching the SOHO Video... that is just totally amazing. Makes you feel teeny weenie small, doesn't it?

    Forget Iraq, the 2004 Election, the economy...

    And people question our space exploration budget!!! Silly people!

    --
    D.O.U.O.S.V.A.V.V.M.
  8. Re:So will I ... by Donwulff · · Score: 5, Informative

    These events are already causing a slashdot effect on the solar weather sites without Slashdot even mentioning them, so here's a copy of the best report I've come across, from http://www.spacew.com/cme/index.html:

    Event #49 - 28 October 2003

    Issued: 16:30 UTC, 28 October 2003

    SOURCE EVENT

    Class X17.2 Flare in Region 486 at 11:10 UTC on 28 October 2003
    Type II: 1250 km/sec
    Estimated LASCO-derived Plane of Sky Velocity: 2125 km/sec

    ESTIMATED TIME OF ARRIVAL OF SHOCK AT EARTH

    Estimated Impact Window: 00:00 UTC on 29 October to 21:00 UTC on 29 October
    Preferred Predicted Impact Time: 08:00 UTC, 29 October 2003 (3 am EST on 29 October)
    Estimated Shock Strength (0=Weakest, 9=Strongest): 9

    Predicted Behavior of IMF at Shock Impact

    At Shock Impact, the Interplanetary Magnetic Field is predicted to initially turn:
    SOUTHWARD

    IMPORTANT TIME OF ARRIVAL NOTICE FOR NORTH AMERICANS
    The preferred time of arrival is ***TONIGHT***, TUESDAY NIGHT (before you go to bed that night) near or after 3 am Eastern Standard Time).
    That's 2 am Central Standard Time on TONIGHT.
    That's 1 am Mountain Standard Time on TONIGHT.
    That's MIDNIGHT Pacific Standard Time on TONIGHT.

    EXPECT RESIDUAL ACTIVITY (LESS INTENSE) TOMMORROW NIGHT (WEDNESDAY, 29 OCT) AS WELL !

    EVENT #49 NOTES:

    This is the most energetic Earthward-directed event of the solar cycle.

    SEVERE to MAJOR geomagnetic storming is expected to abruptly commence following the arrival of the shock front from this flare.

    This flare was associated with a Ground-Level Event. It was also associated with very high energy protons at greater than 100 MeV (which are still climbing, over 5 hours after the event began). A magnetic crochet was observed over the daylit sections of the ionosphere. An exceptionally intense shortwave fadeout and polar cap absorption event are in progress. There are reports this event was observed in white-light. Intense radio bursts were associated with this event across the spectrum. The type II shock velocity is not representative of the observed velocity of this CME. The observed velocity as determined by SOHO was 2125 km/sec.

    This event has the potential to produce the strongest geomagnetic storm since 1989. Auroral activity could become visible into the deep low latitude regions. This one is worth driving a good long distance over to find clear skies. It has better potential to produce low-latitude aurora than almost any other event observed in the past decade. Keep in mind that it is also possible the disturbance may not be nearly as geoeffective as many would like. It all depends on the character of the magnetic fields imbedded within the coronal mass ejection. However, we believe it will either be very large, or only modestly large in terms of its capacity to produce disturbed geomagnetic and auroral activity. We do not expect this disturbance to be small.

    These predictions may be based on preliminary data and may be revised without warning. The predictions should not be used as a definitive indication of CME impact times or strengths and may frequently be in error. The proprietary methods used to estimate shock impact times are under continual development. Caution is advised.

  9. Check your servers.... by grsiepka · · Score: 5, Interesting

    We have probably 30-40 different Sun servers at our shop that actually are affected by this. I guess (it sounds stupid as hell but its true) certain models of Sun's 400 mhz processors (used in anything from Ultra 10's to E4500's) were not shielded properly and actually can panic when substantial CME's like this occur.

  10. Tin foil hat! by Short+Circuit · · Score: 5, Funny

    And people told me my tin-foil hat wouldn't come in useful!

  11. Re:A question about the Sun's behavior by isaac · · Score: 5, Insightful
    The sunspot cycle (which takes 11 years) peaked in 2000, yet there's an unusually large amount of activity of late. There was a somewhat intense solar flare a few days ago, and now this one, which is believed to be the third-largest one on record. Are there any explanations for this large amount of activity at what should be a non-peak time?

    Let's see:

    • The roughly-11-year solar cycle is just based on observation and correlation. It lets one make certain predictions about the likelihood of solar events, but that's all.
    • Recorded history isn't very long compared to the sun's age, to say nothing of the still-shorter track record of scientific solar observation. The sun may (and probably does) exhibit other epicyclic phenomena on timescales too long for us to have directly measured.

    That's a start. Just because we're past the predicted peak of current cycle doesn't mean there won't be solar activity.

    -Isaac

    --
    I am not a lawyer, and this is not legal advice. For Entertainment Purposes Only.
  12. X10 is exacting its revenge by IGnatius+T+Foobar · · Score: 5, Funny

    The mighty and powerful X10 Corporation is now exacting its revenge upon its enemies! No popunders, you say? Fine! They have now upgraded from X10 to X17, and instead of simply displaying popunder windows they will now bombard the Earth with fireballs!

    (...and the followers of Mammon shall tremble.)

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