Viewing archive of Tuesday, 12 April 2022

Daily bulletin on solar and geomagnetic activity from the SIDC

Issued: 2022 Apr 12 1232 UTC

SIDC Forecast

Valid from 1230 UTC, 12 Apr 2022 until 14 Apr 2022
Solar flares

Quiet conditions (<50% probability of C-class flares)

Geomagnetism

Quiet (A<20 and K<4)

Solar protons

Quiet

10cm fluxAp
12 Apr 2022098005
13 Apr 2022098006
14 Apr 2022099012

Bulletin

During last 24 hours the solar flaring activity was low with only several B-class and low C-class flares reported, originating mostly from the Catania sunspot groups 73 and 66 (NOAA ARs 2983 and 2982, respectively). These two sunspot groups are presently rotating across the West solar limb. In the coming hours we can expect B-class flares and possibly also isolated C-class flares from the sunspot groups observed presently on the visible side of the solar disc as seen from Earth. The partial halo CME with projected plane-of-the-sky speed of about 500 km/s and angular width of about 180 degrees, was observed in the evening of April 11. The CME was first time observed in the SOHO/LASCO C2 filed of view at 21:12 UT and in the STEREO A/COR2 field of view at 20:23 UT. There are no clear on disc signatures of the CME observed on the visible side of the Sun, as seen from Earth or from the STEREO A, indicating that this CME was a back side event and will therefore not arrive to Earth.

The greater than 10 MeV proton flux was at background levels, and the greater than 2 MeV electron flux was under the 1000 pfu threshold, we expect them to remain on these levels in the coming hours. The 24h electron fluence is at normal level and we expect it will stay so in the coming 24 hours. The in situ observations indicate arrival of the magnetic structure, possibly the glancing blow from the CME observed in the early morning of April 7. However, as the simultaneous increase of the interplanetary magnetic filed magnitude, the solar wind speed, density and temperature started only few hours ago (at about 10:20 UT today), more observations are needed to confirm arrival of the CME. The solar wind speed is presently about 500 km/s and the interplanetary magnetic field magnitude is about 8 nT. The geomagnetic conditions are presently quiet to unsettled. However, the arrival of the mentioned CME might cause the disturbed geomagnetic conditions in the coming hours with the K values up to 4 and possible isolated intervals of K=5.

Today's estimated international sunspot number (ISN): 012, based on 19 stations.

Solar indices for 11 Apr 2022

Wolf number Catania012
10cm solar flux099
AK Chambon La Forêt011
AK Wingst009
Estimated Ap010
Estimated international sunspot number011 - Based on 20 stations

Noticeable events summary

DayBeginMaxEndLocStrengthOP10cmCatania/NOAARadio burst types
None

Provided by the Solar Influences Data analysis Center© - SIDC - Processed by SpaceWeatherLive

All times in UTC

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