Tuesday, January 28, 2020

SPACE - S0 - 20200128 - Solar Mission, Climate Surprises, Observers' Research

SPACE - S0 - 20200128 - Solar Mission, Climate Surprises, Observers' Research

Good Morning, 0bservers!

   
   
Solar winds remained in the 350 KPS for the bulk of the US daylight hours yesterday, and slowly tapered off to near 300 KPS in the early morning hours here, now hovering around 315 KPS. The KP Index was on the floor for much of yesterday, only getting up to KP-1 levels after UTC midnight. The bright spot in the South appears to be a bit more active, but it doesn't look like a full-blown CME, while the equatorial sunspot continues its march toward the Western lim and slowly out of range of its effect on Earth (but we're not out of the woods quite yet with that one). If you get a chance, head over to SpaceWeatherNews  and click on the solar video on the far left (304Å, ionized helium) and look at the gorgeous activity on the NorthEast (upper-left) lim. The lithosphere was a bit quieter yesterday, with a few blot echos, a deep (30KM) Mag 5.2 off Amatignak Island in Alaska again, a shallow Mag 5.1 in Iran and another deep Mag 5.1 in Iran.
  
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A short but interesting video on the scales of space --

  
Enjoy!
  
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