Waiting for a Geomagnetic Storm

Department: 
Space Weather
Teaser: 

"The CME from Tuesday's magnificent flare still hasn't reached Earth. NOAA forecasters haven't given up, though."

Source: 

SpaceWeather.com Jun 09 2200

he CME from Tuesday's magnificent flare still hasn't reached Earth. NOAA forecasters haven't given up, though. They estimate a 20% to 30% chance that the cloud may yet deliver a glancing blow to our planet's magnetic field and spark geomagnetic storms during the next 24 hours. High latitude sky watchers should remain alert for auroras. Aurora alerts: voice, text.

While you're waiting, watch the eruption one more time:…

"It looks like someone kicked a clod of dirt in the air," says solar physicist C. Alex Young of NASA's Goddard Space Flight Center in a Youtube video. "I've never seen material released in this way before--an amazing, amazing event."

Much of the plasma thrown up by the blast simply fell back to the sun--indeed, that's what makes the footage so dramatic. In the movies you can see blobs of hot gas as large as Earth making bright splashes where they hit the stellar surface. Some plasma, however, reached escape velocity and left the sun in the form of a coronal mass ejection:…

See SpaceWeather.com for links to further info.