Sun unleashes four potent solar flares
US: The Sun has unleashed four potent solar flares this
week, marking the most intense activity yet this year and causing limited
interruptions to high-frequency radio communications.
One of them was classified as an X3.2 flare, with X-class
flares being the most intense type, the US space agency said.
“This is the strongest X-class flare of 2013 so far,
surpassing in strength the two X-class flares that occurred earlier in the
24-hour period,” NASA said of the flare that peaked at 0111 GMT Tuesday.
A fourth X-class flare peaked at 0148 GMT on Wednesday, NASA
said.
Measuring at X1.2, it caused a temporary radio blackout that
has since subsided, and was categorized as “strong,” or R3 on a scale of 1 to 5
on the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration’s space weather scales.
The latest flares began on May 13 and have sent off bursts
of radiation from the Sun, known as coronal mass ejections (CMEs). The
strongest traveled particularly fast, at a speed of approximately 1,400 miles
(2,253 kilometres) per second, NASA said.
The CMEs have so far not been directed at the Earth but may
impact satellites.
NASA said the CMEs would produce a merged cloud of solar
material that “may give a glancing blow to the STEREO-B and Epoxi spacecraft,”
which are space-based observatories orbiting Earth to monitor solar storms and
comets.
“Their mission operators have been notified. If warranted,
operators can put spacecraft into safe mode to protect the instruments from
solar material,” the US space agency said.
Experts say that a rise in solar activity is common right
now because the Sun is in a phase of its 11-year activity cycle that is nearing
the solar maximum, expected in 2013.
According to space weather experts at NOAA, more strong
solar flares may be expected in the coming days.
Although CMEs send off potent radiation, Earth is protected
by its magnetic field.
AFP
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