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SOLAR SCIENCE
M8.7 Solar Flare and Earth Directed CME
by Karen C. Fox
Greenbelt MD (SPX) Jan 25, 2012

Solar Dynamics Observatory captured the flare, shown here in teal as that is the color typically used to show light in the 131 Angstrom wavelength, a wavelength in which it is easy to view solar flares. The flare began at 10:38 PM ET on Jan. 22, peaked at 10:59 PM and ended at 11:34 PM. Credit: NASA/SDO/AIA. Go here to view the full video.

The sun erupted late on January 22, 2012 with an M8.7 class flare, an earth-directed coronal mass ejection (CME), and a burst of fast moving, highly energetic protons known as a "solar energetic particle" event.

The latter has caused the strongest solar radiation storm since September 2005 according to NOAA's Space Weather Prediction Center.

NASA's Goddard Space Weather Center's models predict that the CME is moving at almost 1,400 miles per second, and could reach Earth's magnetosphere - the magnetic envelope that surrounds Earth - as early as tomorrow, Jan 24 at 9 AM ET (plus or minus 7 hours).

This has the potential to provide good auroral displays, possibly at lower latitudes than normal.

Related Links
NASA Goddard Space Flight Center
Solar Science News at SpaceDaily




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SOLAR SCIENCE
Elusive Matter Found To Be Abundant Far Above Earth
Stokholm, Sweden (SPX) Jan 25, 2012
Cold plasma has been well-hidden. Space physicists have long lacked clues to how much of this electrically charged gas exists tens of thousands of miles above Earth and how the stuff may impact our planet's interaction with the Sun. Now, a new method developed by Swedish researchers makes cold plasma measurable and reveals significantly more cold, charged ions in Earth's upper altitudes than pre ... read more


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