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This Is SKY & TELESCOPE's AstroAlert for Sun-Earth Interactions ================================================== =============== A s t r o A l e r t Sun-Earth Alert Solar Terrestrial Dispatch http://www.spacew.com Images and movies of this event are available at: http://www.spacew.com/astroalert.html 28 October 2003 * INTENSE CLASS X17 SOLAR FLARE OBSERVED! * MIDDLE LATITUDE AURORAL ACTIVITY WARNING ISSUED * LOW LATITUDE AURORAL ACTIVITY WATCH ISSUED PLEASE NOTE: Our web site (all space weather web sites) are seeing significant levels of traffic and will be slow to respond. Please be patient. INTENSE CLASS X17 SOLAR FLARE OBSERVED! At 04:35 UTC on 28 October (11:35 pm EST on 27 October), Solar Terrestrial Dispatch issued a warning of a possible imminent X-class flare from Region 486. Commencing at 09:51 UTC (4:51 am EST on 28 October), one of the largest solar flares this solar cycle blew out of Region 486. Solar flares can come larger, but not by much. Events up to approximately twice the strength of todays flare are possible. Nevertheless, this event had bulging muscles and has great potential for producing significant displays of auroral activity ("Northern Lights") TONIGHT and TOMMORROW night, with heavier preference on TONIGHT. The solar flare reached a class X17.2 intensity at an x-ray wavelength between 1 and 8 Angstroms. That is over 1,700 times more powerful than your regular every-day run-of-the-mill C-class x-ray flares and it is over 34 times more powerful than the lowest-category major solar flare. X-rays from this flare reached a maximum intensity at 11:10 UTC on 28 October. X-rays were so intense that on the day-side of the Earth (over Europe), ionospheric currents formed that caused the Earth's magnetic field to dip a little bit in strength. Known as a magnetic crochet, these events are detected by magnetometers and are typically only observed during very intense solar flares. Invisible to all instruments, this solar flare had accelerated protons to extremely high energies and beamed them toward the Earth. Ten minutes after x-rays had reached their maximum intensity, the blast of energetic protons began flooding the Earth's space environment and bombarding the Earth's protective ionosphere. Not to worry though. Our ionosphere can easily handle the onslaught. Protons with energies well in excess of 100 MeV have been observed. In fact, the influx of energetic protons was so intense that they produced secondary reactions within the ionosphere that could be observed by neutron monitors at ground-level in the arctic regions. These "Ground Level Events" (or GLEs) are symptoms of an intense space radiation storm. In fact, before this space radiation storm ends, there is a chance radiation levels could surpass category S4 levels (on a scale between S1 and S5). There are usually only about 3 radiation storms per solar cycle (~11 years) that reach that intensity. Didier Van Hellemont reported that the members of an astronomical observatory in Belgium were testing their camera during the morning and fortuitously caught the elusive and rare white-light component of this flare on video! A frame of the video containing the white-light flare is visible at: http://www.urania.be/php-txt/dynpage...solarflare.jpg While observing the Sun using a small reflector telescope in Germany, Peter Kuklok is also said to have observed the white-light component of this flare within the penumbral area of Region 486. We extend our congratulations to these individuals and groups! It is an extraordinary feat to catch a white-light flare in progress! White-light flares are only observed during the most intense solar flares - and then only for a brief period of time. So what can we expect from this solar flare? If we're lucky, perhaps a really good light show TONIGHT in the heavens above. The coronal mass ejection associated with this major flare was directed squarely at the Earth. A near perfect halo coronal mass ejection rapidly formed. When the velocity of this CME was measured from images taken by the LASCO coronagraph, jaws dropped. The velocity of the disturbance in the plane of the sky was measured by SOHO scientists to be near 2,125 kilometers per second. At that velocity, the disturbance could reach the Earth within 19 hours. However, they do decelerate as they expand outward and this deceleration increases the time it takes them to reach the Earth. Even accounting for this delay (which is hard to predict), there is a good chance this disturbance could reach the Earth in the early to mid morning UTC hours of 29 October. For North Americans, this translates to a time of arrival sometime around 3 am Eastern Standard Time or near midnight on the west coast TONIGHT. If the disturbance does not arrive until later, North America's best chance to see auroral activity will come tommorrow night (Wednesday night, 29 October). PLEASE REMEMBER that there is also a chance this disturbance might produce very little Northern Lights activity. Whether it does or doesn't depends on the internal magnetic field configuration of the disturbance. If it produces storming, it will probably produce STRONG storming. Otherwise, it might not much. Be patient, watch conditions, and/or stay informed. If you are under cloudy skies and have never seen aurora before, this might be an event worth consdering taking a drive for. A MIDDLE LATITUDE AURORAL ACTIVITY WARNING and a LOW LATITUDE AURORAL ACTIVITY WATCH have been issued for the UTC day of 29 and 30 October, but with heaviest emphasis on 29 October. The middle latitude warning is appended below. The low latitude watch is identical except that the "Overall opportunity" for observing auroral activity from the low latitudes is considered "Fair to Poor" (which is remarkably good!). Good luck to everyone! /\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\ MIDDLE LATITUDE AURORAL ACTIVITY WARNING WARNING ISSUED: 20:00 UTC, 28 OCTOBER 2003 /\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\ VALID BEGINNING AT: 00:00 UTC 29 OCTOBER 2003 VALID UNTIL: 23:00 UTC (7 pm EDT) ON 30 OCTOBER HIGH RISK PERIOD: 29 OCTOBER (UTC DAYS) MODERATE RISK PERIOD: 28 - 30 OCTOBER PREDICTED ACTIVITY INDICES: 20, 70, 40, 20 (28 OCTOBER - 31 OCTOBER) POTENTIAL MAGNITUDE OF MIDDLE LATITUDE AURORAL ACTIVITY: HIGH POTENTIAL DURATION OF THIS ACTIVITY: MAIN BELT = 12 TO 18 HOURS MINOR BELT = 18 TO 24 HOURS ESTIMATED OPTIMUM OBSERVING CONDITIONS: NEAR LOCAL MIDNIGHT EXPECTED LUNAR INTERFERENCE: NIL TO LOW OVERALL OPPORTUNITY FOR OBSERVATIONS FROM MIDDLE LATITUDES: GOOD AURORAL ACTIVITY *MAY* BE OBSERVED APPROXIMATELY NORTH OF A LINE FROM... (THIS LINE IS VALID *ONLY* IF FAVORABLE STORM CONDITIONS OCCUR) CENTRAL CALIFORNIA TO NEVADA TO SOUTHERN UTAH TO NORTHERN NEW MEXICO TO NORTHERN TEXAS TO OKLAHOMA TO ARKANSAS TO NORTHERN MISSISSIPPI TO NORTHERN ALABAMA TO NORTHERN GEORGIA TO SOUTH CAROLINA. ACTIVITY *MAY* ALSO BE OBSERVED APPROXIMATELY NORTH OF A LINE FROM... (THIS LINE IS VALID *ONLY* IF FAVORABLE STORM CONDITIONS OCCUR) SOUTHERN FRANCE TO NORTHERN ITALY TO AUSTRIA TO HUNGARY TO UKRAINE TO CENTRAL AND SOUTHERN RUSSIA. NEW ZEALAND AND SOUTHERN REGIONS OF AUSTRALIA MAY ALSO OBSERVE PERIODS OF POTENTIALLY STRONG ACTIVITY. SYNOPSIS... FIRST, a large caveat: A strong auroral storm may happen, or it may not. Whether it does or does not depends on conditions inside the disturbance and how it couples with the Earth's magnetic field. If conditions are favorable, very strong storm activity may be possible. If conditions are not favorable, there may be no visible auroral activity in sight. The POTENTIAL for observing activity with this disturbance is about as high as you can ask. Nevertheless, if the configuration of the disturbance is not favorable for coupling with the Earth, nothing will happen. This is without question, one of the most significant space weather disturbances of the current 11-year solar cycle. It was associated with a historic class X17.2 solar x-ray flare on 28 October and a high velocity coronal mass ejection that is directed squarely at the Earth. The potential exists for a significant space weather storm should this disturbance contain favorable characteristics. A middle latitude auroral activity WARNING means that conditions are expected to become favorable for observing auroral activity over widespread middle latitude regions. A LOW LATITUDE auroral activity WATCH is also being issued for this event. The disturbance is expected to impact sometime in the early to mid UTC hours of 29 October. For North American observers, this means activity could occur TONIGHT - LATE TONIGHT and for most regions sometime AFTER MIDNIGHT (perhaps in the hours around or after 3 am EST). This warning will remain valid through 23:00 UTC (7 pm EDT) on 30 October. It will then be updated, downgraded to a watch or allowed to expire altogether. For updated information, visit: http://www.spacew.com/aurora/forum.html. For real-time plots of current activity, visit: http://www.spacew.com/plots.html PLEASE REPORT VALID OBSERVATIONS OF AURORAL ACTIVITY TO: http://www.spacew.com/submitsighting.html ** End of the AstroAlert Bulletin ** |
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