
Sun news May 12: A pair of fiery simultaneous eruptions
Today’s top story: The sun treated us to a pair of gorgeous, fiery eruptions over the northwest and southeast horizons around 17 UTC yesterday evening. These beautifully synchronized blasts sent chunks of sun-stuff into space, but neither are heading Earthward. However, we’re still awaiting a possible impact of sun-stuff fired out in Sunday’s M5.8 (moderate) flare. This might reach our magnetic field late today or tomorrow. Stay tuned!
Past 24 hours of sun news
(11 UTC May 11 – 11 UTC May 12)
Flare activity
Over the past day, solar activity returned to low levels with the production of only C-class (common) and B-class (weak) flares. In total, the sun fired 9 flares: 6 C-class and 3 B-class.
- Strongest flare: C1.9 from AR4432, peaking at 14:15 UTC on May 11.
- Lead flare producer: AR4432 blasted out all 9 flares of the period.
Sunspot regions
Today the Earth-facing side of our sun is populated with 4 numbered active regions. AR4432 keeps its beta-gamma configuration and AR4436 lost the gamma complexity shown yesterday.
Blasts from the sun?
At around 4:16 UTC on May 11, a filament in the south hemisphere erupted, hurling a blob of solar stuff into space. The event is under modeling and analysis to determine if a component of this coronal mass ejection (CME) is coming our way at Earth. The coronal mass ejection (CME) produced during the M5.8 event from AR4436 on May 10, may provide a possible glancing blow late today or tomorrow. This might trigger a G1 (minor) geomagnetic storm … or it might deliver only a weak disturbance or miss entirely!
Past 24 hours in space weather
Solar wind
Solar wind speeds averaged moderate-low levels during this period. The total interplanetary magnetic field (IMF) stayed weak.
Bz and magnetic coupling
The Bz component shifted between north and south orientations throughout the past day.
Earth’s magnetic field
Over the past day, Earth’s magnetic field remained at quiet levels (Kp 1–2). At the time of this writing, Earth’s magnetic field sits at level 1 on the Kp index scale.
What’s ahead? Sun–Earth forecast
Flare activity forecast
Forecasters expect low activity to continue over the next three days. Today, chances for M-class (moderate) flares are reduced to 40%. The chances for an isolated X-class (strong) flare increased to 10%. The main players are active regions AR4432 and AR4436.
Geomagnetic activity forecast
- May 12: Expect mostly quiet conditions (Kp 0–2) as background solar wind prevails. Active conditions are anticipated late today with the early arrival and glancing blow of a blob of solar stuff hurled into space on May 10. Chances for G1 (minor) geomagnetic storming levels with corresponding auroras are possible.
- May 13: Unsettled-to-active conditions with chances of G1 (minor) geomagnetic storm disturbances. All this is due to a possible glancing blow from the May 10 coronal mass ejection (CME). It may combine with coronal hole effects. If Kp = 5 storm conditions develop, auroras could reach Seattle, Minneapolis, Edinburgh and the Scottish Highlands. Quiet-to-unsettled conditions are more likely if the CME component is weaker than modeled.
- May 14: A new coronal hole fast solar wind stream may begin arriving later in the day. A slight chance of G1 (minor) storm intervals exists as solar wind speeds ramp up again.



Sun news May 11: M5 flare erupts, sun-stuff may glance Earth
The sun just fired its strongest flare in days! The M5.8 (moderate) flare erupted from sunspot region AR4436 in the northeast around 13 UTC yesterday. The blast sent a fast chunk of sun-stuff – a coronal mass ejection (CME) – racing into space. Scientists have detected a fast, powerful pressure wave racing ahead of this CME. The bulk of the ejecta is heading away from Earth, but our planet could receive a glancing blow early on May 13. If so, this could trigger G1 (minor) auroras. Stay tuned, aurora hunters!
Past 24 hours of sun news
(11 UTC May 10 – 11 UTC May 11)
Flare activity
Over the past day, solar activity reached high levels. In total, the sun fired 10 flares: 1 M-class, 8 C-class (common) and 1 B-class (weak).
- Strongest flare: M5.8 from AR4436, peaking at 13:19 UTC on May 10. It triggered an R2 (moderate) radio blackout, disrupting high frequency communications across eastern Africa.
- Lead flare producer: AR4432 generated the vast majority of the remaining activity. It fired 8 C-class flares and 1 B-class event.
Sunspot regions
The Earth-facing solar disk showed 5 numbered active regions.
Blasts from the sun?
A significant partial halo CME accompanied the M5.8 flare from AR4436. It first appeared at 13:48 UTC on May 10, erupting off the east limb in the SOHO spacecraft’s LASCO C2 imagery. The bulk of the ejecta was aimed well east of Earth. However, initial WSA-ENLIL modeling points to a possible glancing blow arriving at Earth early UTC on May 13. If the Earth-directed component is confirmed, Kp could reach 5, indicating G1 (minor) storm potential. However, significant uncertainty remains. The CME may deliver only a weak disturbance or miss entirely.
Past 24 hours in space weather
Solar wind
Solar wind conditions reflected the waning influence of a positive-polarity coronal hole high-speed stream. Speeds declined from slightly elevated to normal by its end. The total interplanetary magnetic field (IMF) stayed weak.
Bz and magnetic coupling
The Bz component remained near neutral and variable. The slight swings from north to south were too weak to drive any significant geomagnetic response. Consequently, Earth’s magnetic shield stayed firmly closed.
Earth’s magnetic field
Over the past day, Earth’s magnetic field stayed quiet (Kp 0–2). No geomagnetic storm conditions occurred. The weak and variable IMF kept conditions calm throughout. No sustained southward Bz developed.
The sun in recent days



Sun images from our community



Sun images from our community



We sometimes feature sun images obtained using hydrogen-alpha filters. Read why.
Bottom line: Sun news for May 12, 2026: Sun activity returned to low levels. But the sun granted us with double, simultaneous, fiery prominences on the solar horizon.
