Meanwhile, hotter weather elsewhere

by Diane

A prominence associated with an X-class flare of 26 October 2003. Linked image is large...And not just in LA. Giant sunspots 484 and 486 continue to transit the face of the sun, spitting off X-class solar flares every now and then. This prominence, according to Spaceweather.com, is as tall as thirty Earths…

They go on to say: “…On Sunday, Oct. 26th, there were two such blasts — one from each sunspot. The explosions hurled coronal mass ejections (CMEs) into space and somewhat toward Earth.

“Because of these events, sky watchers should be alert for auroras during the nights ahead. High-latitude sites such as Alaska, Canada and US northern border states from Maine to Washington are favored, as usual, but auroras could descend to lower latitudes as well. Forecasters estimate a 25% chance of severe geomagnetic storming when the incoming CMEs sweep past Earth and deliver (probably glancing) blows to our planet’s magnetic field.”

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