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Space Weather News for Sept. 1, 2012
Space Weather News for Sept. 1, 2012
http://spaceweather.com MAGNIFICENT ERUPTION: On August 31st, a magnetic filament on the sun erupted in spectacular fashion, producing a long-duration solar flare, a coronal mass ejection (CME) and one of the most beautiful movies of an explosion ever recorded by NASA's Solar Dynamics Observatory. The CME propelled by the blast might deliver a glancing blow to Earth's magnetic field in the days ahead. Check http://spaceweather.com for movies, forecasts and updates. |
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Space Weather News for Sept. 1, 2012
Sam Wormley wrote:
Space Weather News for Sept. 1, 2012 http://spaceweather.com MAGNIFICENT ERUPTION: On August 31st, a magnetic filament on the sun erupted in spectacular fashion, producing a long-duration solar flare, a coronal mass ejection (CME) and one of the most beautiful movies of an explosion ever recorded by NASA's Solar Dynamics Observatory. The CME propelled by the blast might deliver a glancing blow to Earth's magnetic field in the days ahead. Check http://spaceweather.com for movies, forecasts and updates. So in a few days time, the Earth would feel very warm because the delay between large CME events on the Sun and the apparent warmer Sun effects and warmer Earth weather are delayed by a few days. Expect the wormly troll(s) to go into overtime with glow ball warmie stories. The media will also get primed with huge torrent of glow ball warmie stories. These so called journalists are as predictable as sheeple and will go into print with all that glow ball warmie crap not knowing how its all coordinated. |
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Space Weather News for Sept. 1, 2012
On Sep 1, 6:20*pm, 7
email_at_www_at_enemygadgets_dot_...@enemygadgets .com wrote: Sam Wormley wrote: Space Weather News for Sept. 1, 2012 http://spaceweather.com MAGNIFICENT ERUPTION: *On August 31st, a magnetic filament on the sun erupted in spectacular fashion, producing a long-duration solar flare, a coronal mass ejection (CME) and one of the most beautiful movies of an explosion ever recorded by NASA's Solar Dynamics Observatory. *The CME propelled by the blast might deliver a glancing blow to Earth's magnetic field in the days ahead. Checkhttp://spaceweather.comfor movies, forecasts and updates. So in a few days time, the Earth would feel very warm because the delay between large CME events on the Sun and the apparent warmer Sun effects and warmer Earth weather are delayed by a few days. Expect the wormly troll(s) to go into overtime with glow ball warmie stories. The media will also get primed with huge torrent of glow ball warmie stories. These so called journalists are as predictable as sheeple and will go into print with all that glow ball warmie crap not knowing how its all coordinated. Sam as our infomercial spewing parrot is always primed and ready to publish the mainstream status-quo, because that's the most failsafe position to stand his baseless ground upon. Perhaps a direct hit by a 1e14 kg CME (1e26 J) would have some measurable global temperature impact, other than our satellites and global infrastructure failures from the added radiation and EMF surge. However, a glancing blow by any 1e12 kg (1e24 J) or smaller CME shouldn't be a problem. http://www.ips.gov.au/Space_Weather/3/1 "The amount of material in a CME varies widely, but the average mass has been estimated as being around 1.6 x 1012 kg (less than a millionth of the mass of Earth's atmosphere). The speed at which a CME travels also varies a lot, being on average around 500 km/s. At this speed, a CME takes 3-4 days to reach Earth. Some CMEs get here in half the time." Sam likes any of NASA's eyecandy, but otherwise our Sam is either unable or unwilling to interpret anything for himself. |
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Space Weather News for Sept. 1, 2012
On Sep 1, 3:10*pm, Sam Wormley wrote:
Space Weather News for Sept. 1, 2012 http://spaceweather.com MAGNIFICENT ERUPTION: *On August 31st, a magnetic filament on the sun erupted in spectacular fashion, producing a long-duration solar flare, a coronal mass ejection (CME) and one of the most beautiful movies of an explosion ever recorded by NASA's Solar Dynamics Observatory. *The CME propelled by the blast might deliver a glancing blow to Earth's magnetic field in the days ahead. Check http://spaceweather.comfor movies, forecasts and updates. http://ase.tufts.edu/cosmos/view_overview.asp?id=27 "Coronal mass ejections hurl between 1 and 50 billion tons, or 1012 to 5 x 1013 kilograms, of material out from the Sun at apparent speeds near the Sun of up to 3,400 kilometers per second. But most coronal mass ejections exhibit apparent speeds of between 300 and 500 kilometers per second." A direct hit from a CME of 1e14 kg arriving at 1000 km/sec is when we can start to panic. Are you trying to start something, out of nothing? |
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Space Weather News for Sept. 1, 2012
Sam Wormley wrote:
Space Weather News for Sept. 1, 2012 http://spaceweather.com MAGNIFICENT ERUPTION: On August 31st, a magnetic filament on the sun erupted in spectacular fashion, producing a long-duration solar flare, a coronal mass ejection (CME) and one of the most beautiful movies of an explosion ever recorded by NASA's Solar Dynamics Observatory. The CME propelled by the blast might deliver a glancing blow to Earth's magnetic field in the days ahead. Check http://spaceweather.com for movies, forecasts and updates. Looks like a backstroke of an impact of a marble falling flat into a bowl of water. Visually that appears to be the result of a meteor strike. 1)I've read the sunspot cyclicity is due to Saturn and Jupiter. 2)It could also be from passing through various galactic spokes. 3)Some kind of internal magnetic gyration. (2) seems to be the only one that survives close scrutiny, IMHO. Ken |
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