Viewing archive of Wednesday, 14 March 2012

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 2012 Mar 14 2200 UTC
Prepared by the NOAA © SWPC and processed by SpaceWeatherLive.com

Joint USAF/NOAA Report of Solar and Geophysical Activity

SDF Number 074 Issued at 2200Z on 14 Mar 2012

IA. Analysis of Solar Active Regions and Activity from 13-2100Z to 14-2100Z

Solar activity was moderate. Region 1432 (N14E03) produced an M2/1N event at 14/1521Z associated with a faint CME as visible on LASCO C2 (plane-of-sky velocity 392 km/s) with a narrow northeast trajectory. As of current, this CME is not expected to be geoeffective.
IB. Solar Activity Forecast
Solar activity is expected to be low to moderate with a slight chance for an isolated X-class flare until Region 1429 (N19W77) rotates behind the limb. On days 2 and 3 (16-17 March) activity is expected to decrease to low levels with a chance for moderate flaring from Region 1432.
IIA. Geophysical Activity Summary 13-2100Z to 14-2100Z
The geomagnetic field was at quiet to unsettled levels reaching active levels at high latitudes. Correction to yesterdays summary, the greater than 100 MeV event began at 13/1810Z, reached a peak value of 1 PFU at 13/1905Z, and ended at 13/2255Z. The 10 MeV proton event greater than 100 PFU (S2-Moderate) event began at 13/1855Z, reached a peak value of 469 PFU at 13/2045Z, and dropped below 100 PFU into S1-Minor threshold at 14/0955Z. The proton event is currently around 33 PFU and gradually decreasing. The greater than 2 MeV electron flux at geosynchronous orbit was at high levels throughout the period.
IIB. Geophysical Activity Forecast
Geomagnetic activity is expected to be quiet to unsettled on 15 March. Activity is expected to increase to active levels on 16 March due to effects from the 13 March transient and a recurrent coronal hole high speed stream. Activity is expected to return to mostly unsettled levels on 17 March as effects from these two influences begin to wane slightly. The greater than 10 MeV proton event is expected to continue to decrease over the next three days.
III. Event Probabilities 15 Mar to 17 Mar
Class M70%40%40%
Class X20%05%05%
Proton90%40%70%
PCAFred
IV. Penticton 10.7 cm Flux
  Observed       14 Mar 119
  Predicted   15 Mar-17 Mar  115/110/105
  90 Day Mean        14 Mar 125
V. Geomagnetic A Indices
  Observed Afr/Ap 13 Mar  010/011
  Estimated     Afr/Ap 14 Mar  006/008
  Predicted    Afr/Ap 15 Mar-17 Mar  009/015-015/020-018/015
VI. Geomagnetic Activity Probabilities 15 Mar to 17 Mar
A. Middle Latitudes
Active15%25%25%
Minor storm05%05%10%
Major-severe storm01%01%01%
B. High Latitudes
Active15%20%15%
Minor storm15%30%20%
Major-severe storm05%35%20%

All times in UTC

<< Go to daily overview page

Latest news

Support SpaceWeatherLive.com!

A lot of people come to SpaceWeatherLive to follow the Sun's activity or if there is aurora to be seen, but with more traffic comes higher server costs. Consider a donation if you enjoy SpaceWeatherLive so we can keep the website online!

100%
Support SpaceWeatherLive with our merchandise
Check out our merchandise

Latest alerts

Get instant alerts!

Space weather facts

Last X-flare2024/11/06X2.39
Last M-flare2024/11/13M1.7
Last geomagnetic storm2024/11/10Kp5+ (G1)
Spotless days
Last spotless day2022/06/08
Monthly mean Sunspot Number
October 2024166.4 +25
November 2024166 -0.4
Last 30 days163.2 +18.4

This day in history*

Solar flares
11999X1.15
21999M8.06
32005M5.58
41999M4.11
52005M3.72
DstG
11960-167G3
21998-109G2
32012-108G2
41989-105
51979-90G1
*since 1994

Social networks