Coronal hole effects, M1.9 solar flare

Wednesday, 4 November 2015 11:24 UTC

Coronal hole effects, M1.9 solar flare

Geomagnetic conditions remain at the minor G1 geomagnetic storming conditions due to the high solar wind speed and a minor southward Bz component of the IMF.

The coronal hole solar wind stream never gave us the anticipated strong G3 geomagnetic storm. As a matter of fact, not even the moderate G2 geomagnetic storming threshold was reached. The direction of the IMF (Bz) didn't go south long enough during the onset phase to cause storming conditions of the G2 level.

Many high latitude and upper middle latitude with good weather conditions still managed to capture very decent auroral displays. Our header image comes from Tasmania (Australia) and was captured by Frostys Photos. If you managed to capture the aurora as well during the past fewd days please upload your work to our gallery!

M1.9 solar flare

Auroral activity remains elevated thanks to coronal hole solar wind stream effects but we should not forget to keep an eye on the Sun. Sunspot region 2445 was responsible today for an impulsive M1.9 solar flare peaking at 03:26 UTC.

A minor coronal mass ejection was released west of our orbital plane. No impact at Earth is to be expected from this event. The image below shows SOHO LASCO C2 coronagraph imagery of the CME.

Any mentioned solar flare in this article has a scaling factor applied by the Space Weather Prediction Center (SWPC), the reported solar flares are 42% smaller than for the science quality data. The scaling factor has been removed from our archived solar flare data to reflect the true physical units.

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