Colossal X-class solar flare erupts from 'rule-breaking' sunspot and Earth is in the firing line (video)
We could expect even more eruptions from this sunspot region in the coming days.
The active sun is kicking into overdrive and we could be in for yet more dazzling auroras.
In the early morning hours today (Aug. 14), the sun unleashed the most powerful class of solar flare, in a potent X-class eruption. The solar flare peaked at 2:40 a.m. EDT (0640 GMT) and caused shortwave radio blackouts over the sunlit portion of Earth at the time of the eruption, Asia and the Indian Ocean.
What makes this X-class solar flare particularly interesting is that it erupted from 'rule-breaking' sunspot AR3784 which had already garnered the attention of solar scientists and aurora chasers due to its strange polarity.
The sunspot's polarity breaks a hundred-year-old rule, Hale's Law, whereby sunspots in the Northern Hemisphere should be polarized -+. Instead, sunspot AR3784 is polarized ±, a whole 90-degree twist, according to Spaceweather.com.
Related: Rare pair of northern lights & Perseid meteor shower delights skywatchers
It's not the first sunspot to break the rule, according to spaceweather.com, it happens approximately 3% of the time. However, a majority of "rule-breakers" show a "reversed polarity" of +- instead of -+, but AR3784 lies somewhere between the two.
Experts at Spaceweather.com suggested that the "magnetic underpinnings of this sunspot are corkscrewing in an unusual way. If opposite magnetic polarities get twisted together too tightly, there could be an X-class solar flare." Lo and behold the sunspot did just that.
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Solar flares are eruptions on the sun's surface that release intense bursts of electromagnetic radiation. These flares occur when built-up magnetic energy in the solar atmosphere is suddenly released. They are classified by size into different categories, with X-class flares being the most powerful. M-class flares are 10 times less intense than X-class, followed by C-class flares, which are 10 times weaker than M-class. B-class flares are 10 times weaker than C-class, and A-class flares, which are 10 times weaker than B-class, have no significant effects on Earth. Within each class, numbers from 1 to 10 (and beyond for X-class) indicate the relative strength of the flare.
Powerful solar flares like the one released this morning can often be accompanied by a coronal mass ejection — a large plume of plasma and magnetic field from the sun. It has since been confirmed that yesterday's X-flare hurled off a faint CME directly toward Earth.
The exact timing of when the CME will arrive is uncertain with NOAA's model suggesting an arrival date of Aug. 18 while NASA's model leans closer to Aug. 17.
Aurora hunters cross your fingers and charge those cameras! (If you hope to snap a photo of the northern lights, check out our guide on where and how to photograph auroras.)
CMEs carry electrically charged particles known as ions, and when these collide with Earth's magnetosphere, they can trigger geomagnetic storms. During these storms, the ions interact with gases in Earth's atmosphere, releasing energy in the form of light. This phenomenon is recognized as the northern lights, or aurora borealis, in the Northern Hemisphere, and as the southern lights, or aurora australis, in the Southern Hemisphere.
It wasn't just a CME that accompanied the X-flare but also a strong radio blackout. The shortwave radio blackouts detected over Asia and the Indian Ocean resulted from the intense burst of X-rays and extreme ultraviolet radiation emitted during the X-flare.
Radiation from solar flares reaches Earth at the speed of light and ionizes the upper atmosphere upon arrival. This ionization creates a denser environment for high-frequency shortwave radio signals that facilitate long-distance communication to travel through.
As these radio waves pass through ionized (electrically charged) layers, they lose energy due to increased collisions with electrons, which can weaken or entirely absorb the radio signals.
Editor's note: This story was updated at 5:30 a.m. EDT (0930 GMT) to include information about the confirmed CME release and anticipated arrival dates.
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Daisy Dobrijevic joined Space.com in February 2022 having previously worked for our sister publication All About Space magazine as a staff writer. Before joining us, Daisy completed an editorial internship with the BBC Sky at Night Magazine and worked at the National Space Centre in Leicester, U.K., where she enjoyed communicating space science to the public. In 2021, Daisy completed a PhD in plant physiology and also holds a Master's in Environmental Science, she is currently based in Nottingham, U.K. Daisy is passionate about all things space, with a penchant for solar activity and space weather. She has a strong interest in astrotourism and loves nothing more than a good northern lights chase!
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SiliconGraybeard While it's interesting when the sun produces an X-class flare pointed at us, it would be orders of magnitude more helpful to tell us the size of the flare. As you point out, X class, like all the classes, has many levels and the higher the number, the more potential there is for damage. If this was an X1, it's just a tiny bit stronger than an M9.9, but far, far weaker than an X10 and tiny compared to the one that went off pointed exactly away from us a few weeks ago.Reply -
CircuitBurner
They don't want to scare us.SiliconGraybeard said:While it's interesting when the sun produces an X-class flare pointed at us, it would be orders of magnitude more helpful to tell us the size of the flare. As you point out, X class, like all the classes, has many levels and the higher the number, the more potential there is for damage. If this was an X1, it's just a tiny bit stronger than an M9.9, but far, far weaker than an X10 and tiny compared to the one that went off pointed exactly away from us a few weeks ago.
Regardless, when the double X27 flares come at us, whoever is still alive 2 days after will get the Aurora treat of the millennium. Just stay underground until the fires all subside, and hope for openings in the smoke field to allow a glimpse of the sky.
But hey, even if the smoke is too thick still, the Auroras should be bright enough for the light to penetrate closed eyelids. -
SiliconGraybeard Compared to that, though, it's pretty disappointing to call an X1.1 "colossal."Reply -
Laz
ahhh, something to look forward to then.....CircuitBurner said:They don't want to scare us.
Regardless, when the double X27 flares come at us, whoever is still alive 2 days after will get the Aurora treat of the millennium. Just stay underground until the fires all subside, and hope for openings in the smoke field to allow a glimpse of the sky.
But hey, even if the smoke is too thick still, the Auroras should be bright enough for the light to penetrate closed eyelids. -
crozar The burst in earth time occured on the 10th of August 5pm in Germany.Reply
Your equipment is showing you time and gravity away of its original time delayed to what you saw and what had happened and that took merely 10 min to hit earth while I was at my balcony.
My skin is tough I know what happened for a fact based in feel and not just jabbing equatantional theories. -
Miguel Martos Rich Is there a possibility that this could lead to global warming? Please respond with explanation.Reply