Space Weather Today pinned «Solar wind speed: 365.9 km/sec density: 8.9 protons/cm3 Updated: Today at 1606 UT X-ray Solar Flares 6-hr max: C4 1333 UT Jan14 24-hr: M1 0203 UT Jan14 explanation | more data Updated: Today at: 1610 UT»
GEOMAGNETIC STORM WATCH: Minor G1-class geomagnetic storms are possible today, Jan. 17th, when a CME is expected to graze Earth's magnetic field. The storm cloud was hurled in our direction by a C4-class solar flare from sunspot AR2925 on Jan. 14th. High-latitude sky watchers should be alert for auroras.
GLANCING-BLOW CME: As predicted, a CME brushed Earth's magnetic field during the late hours of Jan. 17th. The glancing blow sparked a minor G1-class geomagnetic storm. The CME was hurled into space on Jan. 14th by a C4-class solar flare (sunspot AR2925). Storm conditions are subsiding now and should continue to wane throughout Jan. 18th.
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VOLCANIC GRAVITY WAVES OVER HAWAII: The eruption of an undersea volcano near Tonga on Jan. 15th was even bigger than anyone thought. It nearly touched the edge of space. Hours after a mushroom cloud burst out of the Pacific Ocean, cameras at the Gemini Observatory on Mauna Kea recorded red waves rippling over Hawaii.
These are gravity waves, a type of atmospheric disturbance excited by intense thunderstorms and volcanic eruptions. Many gravity waves scud through the low atmosphere. The ripples caught by Gemini's Cloudcam, however, are in the mesosphere 85 km high--the realm of meteors, sprites, and noctilucent clouds.
Photographer Steve Cullen spotted the waves in online footage. "I had a hunch that Gemini Cloudcams might detect gravity waves produced by the eruption of Hunga Tonga-Hunga Ha'apai. So, I just took a look and there they were!"
These are gravity waves, a type of atmospheric disturbance excited by intense thunderstorms and volcanic eruptions. Many gravity waves scud through the low atmosphere. The ripples caught by Gemini's Cloudcam, however, are in the mesosphere 85 km high--the realm of meteors, sprites, and noctilucent clouds.
Photographer Steve Cullen spotted the waves in online footage. "I had a hunch that Gemini Cloudcams might detect gravity waves produced by the eruption of Hunga Tonga-Hunga Ha'apai. So, I just took a look and there they were!"
CME UPDATE: Yesterday, Jan. 18th, an M1.5-class solar flare from sunspot AR2929 hurled a CME into space. NOAA forecasters have analyzed the storm cloud and determined that it probably has an Earth-directed component. A glancing blow is possible on Jan. 22-23, bringing minor geomagnetic storms and auroras to the Arctic Circle.