Viewing archive of Monday, 17 January 2005

Solar activity report

Any mentioned solar flare in this report has a scaling factor applied by the Space Weather Prediction Center (SWPC). Because of the SWPC scaling factor, solar flares are reported as 42% smaller than for the science quality data. The scaling factor has been removed from our archived solar flare data to reflect the true physical units.
Report of Solar-Geophysical Activity 2005 Jan 17 2200 UTC
Prepared by the NOAA © SWPC and processed by SpaceWeatherLive.com

Joint USAF/NOAA Report of Solar and Geophysical Activity

SDF Number 017 Issued at 2200Z on 17 Jan 2005

IA. Analysis of Solar Active Regions and Activity from 16-2100Z to 17-2100Z

Solar activity was high. Region 720 (N13W30) continued to produce flare activity with the largest being an X3/2f at 17/0952 UTC. This flare was associated with a complex full-halo CME directed mostly towards the northwest. Although this region remains large and magnetically complex some restructuring of the sunspots was apparent following this flare. New Region 723 (N06E77) is rotating around the east limb.
IB. Solar Activity Forecast
Solar activity is expected to remain at high to very high levels. Region 720 could produce yet another major solar event.
IIA. Geophysical Activity Summary 16-2100Z to 17-2100Z
The geomagnetic field ranged from quiet to severe storm levels. Solar wind conditions observed by the NASA ACE spacecraft show a fairly complex onset of activity which may suggest the arrival of a solar wind structure from combined CMEs expected from previous major flares on 15 January. The proton event at greater than 10 MeV that began on 16/0210 UTC remains in progress. The latest X3 flare discussed in Part IA has increased the current peak flux to 5040 pfu observed at 17/1750 UTC. A proton event at greater than 100 MeV also resulted from the X3 flare, beginning at 17/1215 UTC and with a current peak flux of 28 pfu observed at 17/1700 UTC. The greater than 2 MeV electron flux observed by the GOES spacecraft, as well as the solar wind parameters observed by the ACE SWEPAM instruments, have been rendered temporarily unusable due to the energetic proton event.
IIB. Geophysical Activity Forecast
The geomagnetic field is expected to continue at major to severe storm levels. Another CME arrival is expected late on 18 January, or possibly early on 19 January, due to today's X3 flare, which should keep geomagnetic activity levels elevated. The current proton events are expected to remain in progress.
III. Event Probabilities 18 Jan to 20 Jan
Class M90%90%90%
Class X30%30%30%
Proton99%99%99%
PCAFin progress
IV. Penticton 10.7 cm Flux
  Observed       17 Jan 138
  Predicted   18 Jan-20 Jan  135/130/120
  90 Day Mean        17 Jan 107
V. Geomagnetic A Indices
  Observed Afr/Ap 16 Jan  010/012
  Estimated     Afr/Ap 17 Jan  060/080
  Predicted    Afr/Ap 18 Jan-20 Jan  060/080-050/050-030/030
VI. Geomagnetic Activity Probabilities 18 Jan to 20 Jan
A. Middle Latitudes
Active15%20%50%
Minor storm50%50%30%
Major-severe storm35%30%10%
B. High Latitudes
Active10%10%50%
Minor storm50%50%30%
Major-severe storm40%40%20%

All times in UTC

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