Solar flares are here, everyone unplug your dryer!


Turns out we have exceptionally high solar activity right now, with a category 4 solar flair expected to impact the planet, potentially affecting satellite communications, electronics and power grids.

Of course, if history is any guide the news is absolutely over excited over this, at best those in the northern states may see pretty lights at night.  I was particularly amused this afternoon at a CNN weather person recommending you unplug your dryer just to be safe.  I mean, is that really the most important appliance in his house?  🤣

Also, kind of off topic, if you have binoculars or a telescope with the right solar filters you can catch a glimpse of the dark spots on the sun associated with this CME.  Amazing to imagine that it is about 15-16x wider than the earth. 

erik_squires

@mahgister instead of relying on others why don’t you prepare your home for potential power grid meltdown. People lived in cold climates before electricity.

I dont give a damn about myself i think about OTHERS younger and with children and no money...

infrastructures are a public affair ....

Not a survival egoistic affair like in apocalypse hollywood movie ....

 

and knowledge of nothing.

If you claim this CORRECT ME with a rational argument or stay mute...

By the way, the harassment was a polite request to keep posts shorter).

Liar you already harassed me with hate instead of arguments in the past like the other troll here and calling someone post "boring" in his private mail box uninvited with no reason is harassment and insulting ...

Stop lying at least if you cannot stop being an idiot...

 

I just get really frustrated by and tired of one particular loudmouth who has an opinion about everything

Poor little soul who is so tired and so frustrated ...

incredible...😊

Are you a character  from a Simpsons comic?

I found this interesting :

«Coronal mass ejections (CMEs) are episodic eruptions of solar plasma and magnetic flux that travel out through the solar system, driving extreme space weather. Interpretation of CME observations and their interaction with the solar wind typically assumes CMEs are coherent, almost solid-like objects. We show that supersonic radial propagation of CMEs away from the Sun results in geometric expansion of CME plasma parcels at a speed faster than the local wave speed. Thus information cannot propagate across the CME. Comparing our results with observed properties of over 400 CMEs, we show that CMEs cease to be coherent magnetohydrodynamic structures within 0.3 AU of the Sun. This suggests Earth-directed CMEs are less like billiard balls and more like dust clouds, with apparent coherence only due to similar initial conditions and quasi homogeneity of the medium through which they travel. The incoherence of CMEs suggests interpretation of CME observations requires accurate reconstruction of the ambient solar wind with which they interact, and that simple assumptions about the shape of the CMEs are likely to be invalid when significant spatial/temporal gradients in ambient solar wind conditions are present.»

 

https://www.nature.com/articles/s41598-017-04546-3