SPACE - S0 - 20200925 - Ocean Shutdown from the South, Cosmic Ray Volcanos
Good Morning, 0bservers!
Solar winds have remained elevated from yesterday, still staying in the 450-500 KPS range (which is down from yesterday's peak), current speed up a bit to 520 KPS. Density remained stable, and the temperature has stayed pretty much the same (up). The KP Index did calm down a bit after yesterday's KP-5 peak, but it did come back up to KP-4 (minor solar storm) levels after midnight. After a few days of calm, the Electron Flux popped back up above the threshold for a while yesterday, and we're seeing the X-Ray Flux staying pretty steady in the high Class A flare range. The large coronal hole in the North still moves apace toward the center, the major bright spot right on its heels. No big flares (yet) from it, but the magnetogram this morning seems to suggest there's a lot more going on underneath than 36-48 hours ago. Eyes open, folks. The lithosphere was calm(ish) again, with only four temblors of note: a Mag 5.3 off Mexico in the Gulf of California, a Mag 5.3 in the Scotia Sea, a Mag 5.4 around 70 miles SE of Perryville, Alaska, and a late-breaking Mag 5.3 in India, not too far from the Pakistan border.
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