Categories: Science

Sun Unleashes Powerful X-Class Solar Flare With More Expected

  An X 1.2 class solar flare recorded on Jan. 5, 2022. 
NASA/SDO

An intense solar flare exploded on the surface of the sun late Thursday from a complex sunspot that could, quite literally, flare up again very soon. 

The blast of charged particles was recorded as an X1.2-class flare. X flares are the most powerful category of flares, and can cause geomagnetic storms to affect Earth’s magnetic field with the potential to damage satellites, communications equipment and even the power grid. 

The flare was the most powerful seen since at least October. 


NASA/SDO

An X1 flare like this one, though, is at the low end of the X-scale. Thus, no immediate damage from the blast itself has been reported just yet, with the exception of a short-wave radio blackout reported over parts of Australia and the South Pacific. This blackout was the result of the solar flare’s energized blast traveling at the speed of light toward our planet, reaching Earth in a mere eight minutes — but still, it was brief.

However, scientists believe there is surely more in this sunspot’s arsenal.

“Given the size and apparent complexity of this large active region, there’s a good chance the explosions will continue in the days ahead,” writes former NASA astronomer Dr. Tony Phillips at Spaceweather.com.

Powerful flares are often accompanied by coronal mass ejections (CMEs) of hot plasma that can be hurled in the direction of Earth but at much slower speeds, taking a day or more to make the journey. 

When strong CMEs make a direct impact on Earth, the result can be bright auroral displays at higher latitudes, but also the aforementioned infrastructure damage. So far there is no report of a CME accompanying Thursday’s flare. 

This is a welcome surprise, as the massive and energetically complex sunspot that produced it spent the earlier part of this week blasting powerful flares and CMEs off the far side of the sun. Now that sunspot, which is cataloged as AR3182, is rotating into our direct line of sight from Earth, meaning that future CMEs over the next few days may be aimed right at us. 

NOAA’s Space Weather Prediction Center forecasts a 10 percent chance of more X flares over the weekend.

Share

Recent Posts

Trump on what it will take to bring Israeli hostages home: Hamas must be ‘confronted and destroyed’

close Video Thousands of Israelis protest war in Gaza, call for return of remaining hostages…

10 hours ago

US-backed Gaza aid group launches reservation system after Trump calls for innovation in warzone deliveries

close Video Thousands of Israelis protest war in Gaza, call for return of remaining hostages…

14 hours ago

Air France and KLM breach tied to hacker group

Air France and KLM are warning customers about a new data breach that hit their…

16 hours ago

US envoy nears Lebanon-Israel ceasefire that would disarm Hezbollah terror group

close Video US envoy to Lebanon 'unbelievably satisfied' with proposal to disarm Hezbollah U.S. envoy…

16 hours ago

Apple wins blood oxygen battle for watch owners

Apple Watch owners in the U.S. just got a big reason to update their devices.…

20 hours ago

Ukrainian designer predicts Zelenskyy will wear military suit for high-stakes Trump meeting

close Video Trump, Vance spar with Zelenskyy in tense White House meeting Ukrainian President Zelenskyy…

1 day ago