Wednesday, December 23, 2009

SpaceWeather.com | Yesterday, Dec. 22nd magnetic fields around sunspot 1036 erupted, producing a C7-class solar flare

SOLAR ACTIVITY: Yesterday, Dec. 22nd at approximately 0455 UT, magnetic fields around sunspot 1036 erupted, producing a C7-class solar flare. NASA's STEREO-A spacecraft was almost directly above the sunspot at the time of the blast and recorded this extreme ultraviolet movie:




The shadowy wave racing away from the blast site is a "solar tsunami"--a swell of hot, magnetized plasma about 100,000 km high packing as much energy as a million megatons of TNT. The tsunami petered out before it went more than halfway around the sun, but another manifestation of the blast is still going. The eruption hurled a faint coronal mass ejection (CME) into space and the billion-ton cloud should cross Earth's orbit on or about Dec. 25th. A glancing blow to Earth's magnetic field could spark polar auroras for Christmas.

Sunspots 1036 and 1038 are members of new Solar Cycle 24.



http://www.solarmonitor.org/full_disk.php?date=20091223&type=seit_00171&indexnum=1