Sun

Sun activity archive for December 2023

Sun news for December 31, 2023: New sunspot region to bring excitement in the new year?


Sun news for December 31, 2023. Excitement! EarthSky’s C. Alex Young produced this video. Thanks for watching!

The large sunspot region from the sun’s far side – which we reported earlier this week – is now rotating into view. And it looks to be an active one! Why do we say this? Over the past 24 hours, there’s been a significant flare increase from the sun’s northeastern limb (edge), where the new region will soon become visible. That includes a C9.7 and C8 solar flare in the early morning hours today (December 31). You might say, but wait, those are still just C flares. What’s the big deal? What’s exciting is that the sun is still partially hiding them from view. So they’re larger than we can see, because not all of the flares’ light is reaching us. Both of these flares are almost certainly M flares. This new region might be one we’ve seen before, AR3514, which produced an X flare two weeks ago on December 14, 2023. An exciting possibility: this new region might kick off the new year with a bang! Stay tuned.
Last 24 hours: Sun activity is considered low today, with C class flares (though a couple are getting close to M-class size). Both of these flares are coming from the as-yet-unnumbered active region just over the limb. The largest flare in the past 24 hours (11 UTC yesterday to 11 UTC today) was the C9.7 at 8:13 UTC on December 31. During the past day the sun produced 19 C flares, with most coming from AR3530 and the new region in the northeast. AR3530 has rotated out of view over the western limb (edge). In addition to the increased flaring, there were two notable filament eruptions in the north and south at 18 UTC, December 30 and 3:30 UTC, December 31 respectively. The sun has three labeled active regions on its Earth-facing side.

Sun news for December 30, 2023: Huge Prominence!


Sun news for December 30, 2023. The EarthSky sun team produced this video. Thanks for watching!

The sun released a huge prominence eruption around the time of this writing, at about 8:30 UTC December 30. It came from an erupting filament near the southeast limb (edge). It quickly expanded into a massive structure longer than 200 Earths lined up, or about 800,000 miles (1.3 million kilometers). That’s long … about as long as the sun is wide. This eruption released a large blob of solar plasma or a coronal mass ejection (CME). We don’t have much imagery of the CME yet, but more than likely it’s not Earth-directed, given the eruption’s location. While current flare activity is low, we may see some significant action in three to four days. There’s a large sunspot that we can see via helioseismology that is making its way to the Earth-facing side of the sun. This region may be the remains of sunspot region AR3514, the recent X flare producer from December 14, 2023. Stay tuned!
Last 24 hours: Sun activity continues at low levels with C class flares. During the past day the sun produced 10 C flares. The largest was a C6.6 flare from active region AR3530 at 20:17 UTC on December 29. AR3530 produced nine of the ten flares during our observation period from 11 UTC yesterday to 11 UTC today. The sun has five labeled active regions on its Earth-facing side.

Sun news for December 29, 2023: Parker Solar Probe touches the sun, again

Sun news for December 29, 2023. The EarthSky sun team produced this video. Thanks for watching!

Early this morning, Parker Solar Probe reached perihelion – its closest point to the sun in orbit – for the 18th time since its launch in 2018. The first spacecraft to touch the sun is now approximately 5 million miles (8 million km) from our star. And it’s going to get closer. After a flyby of Venus in late 2024, its 22nd to its final (26th) perihelions will be its closest yet, each at around 4.3 million miles (6.9 million km) from the sun’s surface. Amazing! By the way, Parker Solar Probe travels at a speed of 371 thousand miles per hour (597 thousand kph).
Last 24 hours: The sun welcomed Parker Solar Probe with a pick-up in the action. Although activity is still classed as low, we saw 15 C flares between 11 UTC yesterday and 11 UTC today, in contrast to just two the day before. We also saw an almost-M flare, with today’s most active region AR3533 firing a C9.8 flare at 7:55 UTC this morning. The effects of the flare on Earth did not reach the R1 (minor) radio blackout level, but some blackout effects occurred in the South Indian Ocean off the east coast of Madagascar. We expect that further increases in activity are on their way, as larger active regions now on the sun’s far side are approaching the eastern horizon. For now, the sun has six active regions visible from Earth.

Sun news for December 28, 2023: Our star shows its magnetic magic

Sun news for December 28, 2023. Magic? EarthSky’s Deborah Byrd produced this video. Thanks for watching!

The sun is about 330,000 times more massive than Earth. As the pull of gravity is directly related to an object’s mass, the sun’s gravity is immense – strong enough to hold in orbit the solar system’s planets and moons, millions of rocky asteroids, and an untold number of icy comets. Yet at 8 UTC this morning, a wisp of plasma seemed to defy the sun’s mighty pull, floating serenely above our star’s surface. How? What gave the wisp enough oomph to fight against the sun’s gravity? The answer is magnetism. Magnetic fields of varying strength cover the sun and provide most of its activity. And in this case, these invisible magnetic fields levitated the blob of sun-stuff from lower down in the solar atmosphere to high up in the corona. So … not magic, just magnetism! Often, especially nearing Solar Maximum (which is coming as early as 2024), these magnetic fields have enough energy in them to launch that plasma into space. That would be what’s known as a filament eruption with a coronal mass ejection (CME).
Last 24 hours: Sun activity is low. Only two C flares were produced between 11 UTC yesterday and 11 UTC today. Both events came from a newcomer sunspot group, AR3534. The largest event was a C1.9 flare at 19:41 UTC on December 27. AR3534 has been the only active region flaring in the past couple of days, and it will likely dissipate before reaching the southwest limb. AR3551 remains the largest active region on the solar disk, but has stayed quiet over the past day. AR3529 is about to depart over the southwest limb (edge). But action is on its way to the Earth-facing side of our sun; larger active regions now on the sun’s far side are approaching the eastern horizon. For now, the sun has six active regions visible from Earth.

Sun news for December 27, 2023: The sun takes a power nap

It’s been a quiet day on the sun. In the past 24 hours, there were a few C flares and even a smaller B flare. Even the prolific jet-producing regions and filament eruptions are mostly gone. We have some beautiful prominences waiting on the limbs and a bit of jet activity. And, as always, we anticipate more to come. A few days from now, a new coronal hole will rotate into a prime spot for spraying Earth with fast solar wind, hopefully provoking auroral displays. On the far side of the sun, that large sunspot group we talked about a few days ago is now less than a week away. A few new sunspot regions are about to get their designations. So it’s been a day of calm solar seas. But the potential for some serious action is looming!
Last 24 hours: Sun activity continued at low levels during the past day. The sun produced five C flares and a B flare between 11 UTC yesterday and 11 UTC today. The largest event was a C2.3 flare at 11:08 UTC on December 26 from active region AR3526. There’s an unlabeled newcomer in the southeast. The lead flare producer was an as-yet-unnumbered incoming active region located on the southeast limb (edge) with three flares. The sun now has six active regions on its Earth-facing side.

December 27, 2023. A large coronal hole is forming on the solar southeast quadrant. It could be considered a transequatorial coronal hole since touches both hemispheres, the north and south. GOES-16 SUVI image via NOAA.

Sun news for December 26, 2023: Solar Max is on its way

Sun news for December 26, 2023. Solar Max is coming! EarthSky’s Deborah Byrd and C. Alex Young produced this video. Alex also produces @thesuntoday.

For the past 24 hours, the sun has been relatively calm. But Solar Max is on its way, now expected in 2024. Forecasters were predicting 2025 for the peak of the current 11-year sun cycle, Cycle 25. But the current cycle has already outpaced predictions, both in sunspot number and in the number of larger M and X flares. So the past day has been C flares only. But remember the 3 M flares of the day before? And the X flare before that? We’re seeing exactly what’s expected as we approach Solar Max: periods of moderate-to-high activity followed by some lulls. Now the lulls are coming less often. And the moderate-to-high periods are happening more often and with greater intensity. It’s the speed at which this is happening—stronger activity, shorter lulls—that points to a peak in 2024. Also … the past day’s lull in flaring doesn’t mean a lull in all sun activity. Though we’ve observed only C flares in the past day, we’ve also seen lots of solar jets on the disk and both limbs (edges) of the sun. And there’s a large amount of filament and prominence action, including a solid prominence eruption from the sun’s northeast limb. So don’t let the seeming calm fool you—Solar Max is on its way!
Last 24 hours: Sun activity is back to low levels during the past day. Only  11 C flares were produced between 11 UTC yesterday and 11 UTC today. The largest event was a C4.5 flare at 5:01 UTC on December 26 by an unlabeled newcomer on the southwest.  Active region AR3529 produced four flares in the past 24 hours. The sun has seven active regions on its Earth-facing side.

Sun news for December 25, 2023: Flare and filament fun

Sun news for December 25, 2023. Fun! EarthSky’s C. Alex Young produced this video. He also produces @thesuntoday.

The sun kicked it up a notch over the past 24 hours, to give us a fun day of flares and filaments together. Starting at the beginning of the observation period (11 UTC December 24), sunspot group AR3529 released an M2.9 flare. It was followed a few hours later with an M2.6. Almost simultaneous to the M2.9 flare a huge filament north of the M2.9 flare lifted off the sun. Another filament erupted from the eastern limb also nearly simultaneously to the M2.6 flare on the other side of the sun. These filament and flares while nearly simultaneous were coincidental. The M1.1 also had a filament eruption around the same time. But these two events were at the same location, so, in this case, they were related to each other. There were several other smaller, more subtle filament eruptions. Let’s see if the sun has more excitement for us in the coming day!
Last 24 hours: Sun activity reached moderate levels with three M flares. The largest event was an M2.9 at 11:09 TUC on December 24 from AR3529. The region produced an M2.6 at 16:37 UTC. A smaller M1.1 flare came from the southeast limb at 19:21 UTC. All three flares produced radio blackouts over South Africa, South America, and the South Pacific respectfully. The sun has seven active regions on its Earth-facing side.

Sun news for December 24, 2023: Something big this way comes

The title is a bit of word play from a famous Ray Bradbury story. A big group of sunspots may be on its way! When lots of magnetic fields collect in a small area near the sun’s visible surface, we get a sunspot. And wherever they are on the sun, in our view or not, they create disturbances inside the sun that bounce around. These disturbances can be seen as ripples (waves) in the light coming from the sun that are seen from Earth, even when the ripples originate from the far side. That’s exactly what is happening today. There’s a large magnetic field concentration on the other side of the sun, directly opposite the Earth-facing side. Using a technique akin to seismology on Earth – called helioseismology (“sun” seismology) – allows us to see this large sunspot group. This region could decay before it reaches us, but – given its size – there’s a good chance it’ll survive to greet us soon, in about a week.
Last 24 hours: Sun activity on the near side is low, with 13 C flares between 11 UTC yesterday and 11 UTC today, and no flaring and no big eruptions. The biggest flare was a C3.8 from sunspot region AR3529 at 8:06 UTC on December 24. The sun has eight active regions on its Earth-facing side.

The sun, seen as a large white sphere with small dark spots.
View at EarthSky Community Photos. | Patricio León in Santiago, Chile, captured this filtered image of the sun on December 23, 2023. Patricio wrote: “The sun displays three big dark cores in the southern hemisphere and two in the northern hemisphere, plus five other minor spots: quite an impressive array.” Thank you, Patricio!
The sun, seen as a large yellow sphere with a mottled surface and dark spots.
View at EarthSky Community Photos. | David Hoskin in Halifax, Nova Scotia, Canada, captured this filtered view of the sun on December 23, 2023. David wrote: “This hydrogen-alpha filtered image shows several active sunspot groups as well as an impressive number of filaments and prominences.” Thank you, David!
The sun, seen as a large yellow sphere with dark spots, each labeled.
This image shows sun activity – with the most active regions labeled – as of 2 UTC on December 25, 2023. Original image, without labels, via NASA SDO. Courtesy of NASA/SDO and the AIA, EVE, and HMI science teams, with labeling by EarthSky. Today’s sun is posted by Armando Caussade. Why are east and west on the sun reversed?

Sun news for December 23, 2023: Filament story


Sun news for December 22, 2023. EarthSky’s sun team author C. Alex Young also produces @thesuntoday.

Check out the filament eruption near the center of the sun’s disk. We often see the most spectacular filament eruptions at the limb (edge). When the cold, dark background of space is behind them, dark filaments appear as brighter loop-like structures, which we call prominences. But when filaments are on the disk, they can appear dark. Like sunspots, they’re typically cooler than the surrounding solar plasma. So filaments can be hard to see, depending on the wavelength of light observed. If we look at it with H-alpha, like in the image from Mario Rana from December 22, the filament is barely visible. Looking at it in the 193-angstrom wavelength of SDO or SUVI, the filament is much darker in contrast to the rest of the sun. In today’s sun news video, using the 193-angstrom images, we can see the faint filament and then watch it erupt into space!
Last 24 hours: Sun activity levels are back to low, with only seven C flares between 11 UTC yesterday and 11 UTC today. The largest flare was a C3.1 from active sunspot region AR3530 at 9:14 UTC on December 23. Activity was spread between AR3519, AR3526, AR3528 and AR3530. The sun has nine active regions on its Earth-facing side. Two are newcomers, AR3532 on the southwest and AR3533 on the northeast.

Sun news for December 22, 2023: Solstice solar jet party!


Sun news for December 22, 2023. Solar jet party! EarthSky’s sun team – C. Alex Young and Raul Cortes produced this video. EarthSky’s Deborah Byrd hosted it.

Happy December Solstice! To celebrate, the sun is having a solar jet party. Solar jets are tiny, narrow explosions of solar material that may help to explain some of the biggest mysteries of the sun. They might be a source of energetic particles and disturbances in the solar wind. There are lots of notable ones on the sun today, with great examples coming from AR3519, AR3529, and just north of AR3521. You can learn more about solar jets and search for them yourself as part of the Solar Jet Hunter citizen science project.
Last 24 hours: Sun activity is moderate after an isolated M3.3 flare from AR3519 at 0:04 UTC on December 22. This caused an R1 (minor) radio blackout affecting an area over New Caledonia in the South Pacific Ocean. Between 11 UTC yesterday and 11 UTC today, the sun produced 17 flares: the M3.3 flare plus 16 Cs. The lead flare producer was sunspot group AR3519 with 10 Cs and the M flare.

EarthSky sun news friend Linda Schenk produces @thesuntoday with EarthSky author C. Alex Young. Linda produced today’s sun news video. Thanks, Linda, and happy solstice to all!

Sun news for December 21, 2023: Bam! Filament eruption with M4 flare

EarthSky sun news author C. Alex Young also produces @thesuntoday. Alex, Raúl Cortés and Deborah Byrd produced today’s sun news video.

Bam! A filament running from the south to the west of AR3519 erupted earlier today. This was followed by an M4.2 flare from AR3519. The event is under analysis to determine if it produced a coronal mass ejection (CME) that could be heading our way. The powerful M flare has brought the current sun activity level to moderate, just shy of high (reached when we see an M5 flare or higher). AR3519 is about to rotate out of view, but the solar disk is peppered with many more sunspot regions; the sun is really showing what it means to be near solar maximum, expected as early as 2024.
Last 24 hours: Sun activity is moderate after the production of an M4.2 flare by AR3519 at 5:38 UTC on December 21. Shortly after the flare, an R1 (minor) radio blackout affected an area over the South Indian Ocean off the west coast of Australia. Alongside the M flare, the sun produced 16 C flares between 11 UTC yesterday and 11 UTC today. The lead flare producer was AR3529 with six C flares. This is also the largest active region currently on the Earth-facing side of the sun, comprising of 22 individual sunspots on an overall area of more than three Earth surface areas. If you wear the proper eye protection, the region is visible with the unaided eye. The sun currently has nine active regions in view, including a newcomer on the northeast limb (edge) labeled AR3531.

Sun news for December 20, 2023: Huge sunspot group growing fast

EarthSky sun news author C. Alex Young also produces @thesuntoday. Alex, Raúl Cortés and Deborah Byrd produced today’s sun news video.

Sunspot region AR3529 has caught our eye. It emerged quickly over the last few days, growing in size and complexity. And it almost doubled in size over the past 24 hours, with its surface area now equivalent to that of three Earths! It’s also developed a fairly high gamma magnetic complexity (the more magnetically complex an active region is, the greater its chance of producing powerful flares). The video above shows the sunspot group in visible light and extreme ultraviolet light, which helps to show its growth in size and activity. It also helps to illustrate the definition of an active region; it’s not a sunspot, but a group of interacting sunspots, and it includes the loop structure that extends from the lower atmosphere (the solar photosphere, or visible surface) to the sun’s upper atmosphere (its mysterious corona).
Last 24 hours: Sun activity remains low. The sun produced a total of 17 C flares between 11 UTC yesterday and 11 UTC today, the largest event a C8.3 from AR3521 at 8:54 UTC this morning. With four other flares above a C7 level, sun activity isn’t far from moderate. The lead flare producer of the period was AR3521 with six C flares. The sun currently has nine labeled active regions on its Earth-facing side. There is a newcomer on the northeast limb (edge), AR3530.

The sun, seen as a large white sphere with small dark spots.
View at EarthSky Community Photos. | Patricio León in Santiago, Chile, captured this filtered image of the sun on December 19. Patricio wrote: “The sun is rapidly populating with new growing sunspots; the biggest nucleus belongs to AR3529 in the lower left.” Thank you, Patricio!

Sun news for December 19, 2023: More beautiful auroras as storming comes to an end

EarthSky sun news author C. Alex Young also produces @thesuntoday.

After another night of mesmerising auroral displays during a G1 (minor) geomagnetic storm, action at Earth has finally calmed. This fantastic show came after a period of crazy activity on the sun. As the effects of several coronal mass ejections (CMEs) and fast solar wind fade, more action seems to be on the way; let’s see what our star next has in store for us.
Last 24 hours: Sun activity is back to low, but action seems to be picking up. With prominences adorning the limbs (edges) of our star, fresh sunspot groups seem to be just out of view. In fact, incoming sunspots have been observed with helioseismology over the horizon on the eastern limb, soon to rotate into view. Between 11 UTC yesterday and 11 UTC today, 12 C flares were fired. The largest was a C7.4 flare, fired at 3:04 UTC on December 19 by sunspot group AR3528. This active region was the lead flare producer of the period with five Cs. AR3520 was close behind with four C flares. The sun currently has nine labeled active regions on its Earth-facing side, including three newcomers: AR3527 in the west, AR3528 close to the central meridian in the northeast, and AR3529 in the southeast.

Sun news for December 18, 2023: Night #2 for great auroras!

Sun news for December 18, 2023. More auroras! Join EarthSky’s Deborah Byrd in the video above, for more.

It’s been two fabulous night of auroras! At the time of this writing (11 UTC on Monday, December 18), Earth is experiencing yet more geomagnetic storming, due to coronal mass ejections (CMEs) and high speed solar wind from a coronal hole. The storming is at G2 (moderate) levels at this time. Aurora reports were arguably fewer Sunday night (December 17-18) than Saturday night (December 16-17). But both nights were grand! And we might see auroral activity later today. Stay tuned!
Last 24 hours: Sun activity due to flares is moderate with one M1.1 flares and 12 C flares observed. The largest event was an M1.1 flare from sunspot region AR3520 at 20:08 UTC December 17. AR3520 produced five flares including the M1.1. There is significant activity beyond the west limb (edge), most likely due to AR3514 acting up. Several eruptions are visible from this area in 304-angstrom light from SDO and GOES-16. The Earth-facing side of the sun currently has six active regions.

Silhouette of trees with green bands and stars
Sun news December 18, 2023. Lucy Whitt captured the aurora from above the Arctic Circle, en route from Norway to Finland, on the night of December 17-18, 2023. Image via Kelly Whitt.
Posted 
December 1, 2023
 in 
Sun

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