SPACE - S0 - 20200613 - New Geology Theory, Neutron Trouble, BEC at ISS
Good Morning, 0bservers!
The Phi Angle stabilized a bit overnight, staying steady around the 150° range (almost due "South"). That dropped particle density at about the same time, with a small dip in the temperature. As to the solar wind speed, that spent most of yesterday (after staying in the 400 KPS range in the earlier morning) dropping down to 350 KPS, and a further calming to a current 325 KPS. The KP-Index is a bit of a worry, not because it's high, but because it's been in the KP-1 to KP-0 range for the past 36 hours, so we need to keep an eye on a Zero Day Alert if this continues. A disorganized "line" of coronal holes (well, they're trying to be coronal holes) will pass the midpoint, but I'm not exactly sure if we'll see any effect from this. The Southern sunspot marches further away from the midpoint, and further away from risking Earth with a flare should it decide to blow. I don't see any new bright spots glowing on the Eastern lim, so we should be good for a few days in that regard. Did see a far-side ejection on the LASCO C3 over at SWPC, though. Looks like a filament eruption, not actually that strong, and far away from Earth. Only a few blot echos on the lithosphere yesterday, but there was a Mag 5.1 temblor about 75 miles SE of Pangai, Tonga, and a late-breaking Mag 5.0 in the interior of Indonesia near Sumbawa Besar.
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