Monday, 7 November 2016

Coronal mass ejection (CME) to hit Earth as 200,000 km filament erupts a million mph solar energy burst.


As our sun slips quietly into a “Solar Minimum” and sunspot activity has almost completely stopped recently, the last X-Class flare came on the 5th of May, 2015, a year and a half ago; our sun is still unstable and is still erupting solar energy toward the Earth.
The latest eruption promises a fantastic geomagnetic storm and auroras on above Earth on November the 8th.

Spaceweather.com reports 'CANYON OF FIRE' OPENS, SPITS A CME TOWARD EARTH: Yesterday, Nov. 5th, a filament of magnetism in the sun's northern hemisphere became unstable and erupted.
The blast split the sun's atmosphere, hurling a CME into space and creating a "canyon of fire," shown here in a movie recorded by the Solar Dynamics Observatory:
The glowing walls of the canyon trace the original channel where the filament was suspended by magnetic forces above the sun's surface.
From end to end, the structure stretches more than 200,000 km--a real Grand Canyon. Fragments of the exploding filament formed the core of a CME that raced away from the sun faster than a million mph.

NOAA analysts have modelled the trajectory of the CME and concluded that it will probably strike Earth's magnetic field on Nov. 8th.
The impact will spark G1-class geomagnetic storms and auroras at high latitudes.

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