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  • A Taste of Solar Maximum - presented by Science@NASA

  • Experts say Solar Max is due in the year 2013.

  • When it arrives, the peak of the 11-year sunspot cycle

  • will bring more solar flares,

  • more coronal mass ejections,

  • more geomagnetic storms

  • and more auroras than we have experienced in quite some time.

  • On the weekend of July 14, 2012,

  • sky watchers around the world got a taste of things to come.

  • It was mid-Saturday in North America

  • when a coronal mass ejection or "CME"

  • crashed into Earth's magnetic field

  • and triggered the most sustained display of auroras in years.

  • For more than 36 hours,

  • magnetic storms circled Earth's poles.

  • Northern Lights spilled across the Canadian border into the United States

  • as far south as California, Colorado, Kansas, and Arkansas.

  • In the southern hemisphere,

  • skies turned red over Tasmania and New Zealand,

  • while the aurora australis pirouetted around the South Pole.

  • The source of the CME was giant sunspot AR1520,

  • a seething nest of tangled magnetism

  • more than 15 times wider than Earth itself.

  • On July 12th, the sunspot's magnetic field erupted,

  • producing an X-class solar flare

  • and hurling a billion tons of electrified plasma toward our planet.

  • NASA's twin STEREO probes

  • and the European Space Agency's Solar and Heliospheric Observatory

  • monitored the CME as it billowed away from the sun.

  • Using those data,

  • analysts at NOAA and NASA successfully predicted the cloud's arrival time.

  • It would take almost two full days for the CME to cross the 93 million mile void

  • between Earth and sun.

  • The CME's impact sharply compressed Earth's magnetosphere,

  • briefly exposing geosynchronous satellites to solar wind plasma.

  • The shaking of Earth's magnetic field

  • caused compass needles to swing--just a little bit--

  • and prompted electrical currents to flow through the soil at high latitudes.

  • Fortunately, the strike did no harm;

  • satellites survived and power grids stayed online.

  • Next came the light show.

  • As the CME's wake washed across Earth,

  • the polar regions of our planet lit up like a Christmas tree.

  • Red, green, blue and purple auroras capped both ends of the planet,

  • glowing, dancing, and ultimately spreading to places where auroras are seldom seen.

  • In Arkansas, for instance,

  • 'there was a faint glow off and on for most of the night,'

  • reports Brad Emfinger from a little town called Ozark.

  • 'Around 3am there was an outburst of red and purple

  • plainly visible to the naked eye.'

  • In Pawnee Grasslands, Colorado,

  • photographer Robert Arn saw the Northern Lights for the first time ever:

  • 'As soon as I stepped out of the car,

  • the sky looked like it was on fire.

  • Then the Moon, Venus and Jupiter rose together in the east.

  • To see the conjunction and the auroras side-by-side was incredible!'

  • Meanwhile at the other end of the planet,

  • 'auroras were going crazy over the South Pole,'

  • reports Robert Schwarz at the Amundsen-Scott south pole research station.

  • 'We enjoyed the show under crystal clear skies

  • with an air temperature of minus 105 degrees F.'

  • In Ashland, Wisconsin, on the other hand,

  • John Welling watched the show in his shirt sleeves:

  • 'Tonight was absolutely the best

  • with a comfortable temperature of +78 degrees F

  • and Northern Lights dancing overhead.

  • The X-flare definitely lived up to the hype.'

  • From one end of the planet to the other,

  • spanning more than 90 degrees of combined north-south latitude,

  • 183 degrees of temperature, and 360 degrees of longitude,

  • this was truly a global space weather event.

  • And it was just a taste of things to come.

  • The sun earth connection is heating up.

  • For more news about the sun-Earth connection,

  • stay tuned to Science.nasa.gov.

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