To: Gersh Avery who wrote (41) | 5/23/2013 5:22:35 AM | From: GROUND ZERO™ | | | Solar radiation storm yesterday? All last week the solar radiation storms were exceptionally violent, they could have caused the tornadoes in Oklahoma, this is not so far fetched when you think about how the solar radiation storms and the solar winds greatly effect our atmosphere and our weather... another severe solar radiation storm is scheduled again on May 25th, something to watch with interest...
Here, you can see the ongoing radiation storm that got started on May 22nd when the magnetic canopy of sunspot AR1745 exploded. The blast produced an M5-class solar flare and hurled a magnificent CME over the sun's western limb...
spaceweather.com
GZ |
| Is anyone watching the sun lately? | Pastime Discussion ForumsShare | RecommendKeepReplyMark as Last ReadRead Replies (1) |
|
To: Gersh Avery who wrote (43) | 5/29/2013 10:20:32 PM | From: GROUND ZERO™ | | | Guess what!!! Two earth quakes occurred on May 25th, and right on schedule... on 5.2 in Russia and another in Northern California...
GZ |
| Is anyone watching the sun lately? | Pastime Discussion ForumsShare | RecommendKeepReplyMark as Last Read |
|
To: Cage Rattler who wrote (46) | 5/31/2013 4:15:51 PM | From: weatherguru | | | Wow -- that would be something. I tip my hat to him for trying to help/warn others (& make them aware of this interaction).
It is interesting, and (as noted) the large coronal hole is there to "wobble" things after a "wobble" the previous week. The "wobble" of the Earth's magnetic field is like sporadic, gusty winds rippling the sail on a boat. If the wind is steady, then the sail stays taut. If the wind is sporadic, especially from calm to strong, then the sail really ripples (sail = Earth's magnetic field).
For the Atlantic, something from the Canary Islands would trigger a hefty tsunami, i.e. an earthquake/volcanic eruption triggering a land slide?
en.wikipedia.org
Oh, I just read that on the bottom of the page. I put more weight to a full moon on tectonic motion (e.g., 6/22 Bradley date), but the potential wobble from solar flares is there. I'm sure he studies it more than me however, so hmmmmm. |
| Is anyone watching the sun lately? | Pastime Discussion ForumsShare | RecommendKeepReplyMark as Last Read |
|
| |