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Huge solar flare said to jam China communications

Solar flare disrupts China shortwave radio: report
Beijing (AFP) Feb 17, 2011 - The largest solar flare in more than four years has caused disruptions to shortwave radio communications in China, state media has reported. The solar flare, a huge explosion on the sun's surface caused by magnetic activity, affected transmissions in southern China on Tuesday, Xinhua news agency has said, quoting the China Meteorological Administration. The US space administration NASA said Monday's solar flare was the largest in four years, and the event sparked predictions of heightened northern hemisphere aurora activity. Solar flares are the most powerful explosions in the solar system and the radiation they emit can trigger radio blackouts and other phenomena on Earth, NASA said.
by Staff Writers
Washington (AFP) Feb 16, 2011
The sun has unleashed its strongest flare in four years, NASA said Wednesday, as astronomers in southern China reported disturbances to radio communications.

The massive Class X flash -- the largest such category -- erupted at 0156 GMT Tuesday, according to the US space agency.

"X-class flares are the most powerful of all solar events that can trigger radio blackouts and long-lasting radiation storms," disturbing telecommunications and electric grids, NASA added.

The China Meteorological Administration reported a large solar flare and electromagnetic storms jammed shortwave radio communications in southern China, according to the official Xinhua news agency.

It also said the flare caused "sudden ionospheric disturbances" in the atmosphere above China and the CMA warned there was a high probability that large solar flares would appear over the next three days.

NASA's Solar Dynamics Observatory saw a large coronal mass ejection associated with the flash that is blasting toward Earth at about 560 miles per second (900 kilometers per second). The CME was expected to reach the planet's orbit at 0300 GMT Thursday.

The flare spread from Active Region 1158 in the sun's southern hemisphere, which had so far lagged behind the northern hemisphere in flash activity.

It followed several smaller M-class and C-class flares in recent days.

In previous major disturbance of the Earth's electric grid from a solar incident, in 1973, a magnetic storm caused by a solar eruption plunged six million people into the dark in Canada's eastern-central Quebec province.



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