Sunday, November 1, 2009

SpaceWeather.com | Sunspot 1029 produced 10 C-class Solar Flare and billion-ton Coronal Mass Ejection CME billowing past Mercury - November 1, 2009

PARTING SHOT: On its way over the sun's western limb on Oct. 31st, sunspot 1029 unleashed a C-class solar flare and a coronal mass ejection (CME). The Solar and Heliospheric Observatory photographed the billion-ton CME billowing past Mercury:

http://spaceweather.com/images2009/31oct09/cme_c3_big.gif?PHPSESSID=st564agnrc6f8epldb23lf45p3

The blast reinforces sunspot's 1029's position as the most active sunspot of 2009. Last week alone, the sunspot produced ten C-class solar flares, more than tripling the number of flares in the previous 10 months. Sunspot 1029 is a member of long-overdue Solar Cycle 24. Is it also a herald of more active times to come? Stay tuned.