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Forbes
Forbes
27 May 2024


Sun unleashes rare sunspot activity: Charlotte braces for G4 Geostorm, First in two decades

CHARLOTTE, USA - MAY 10: A view of an unusual sun activity created a sunspot, that is responsible ... [+] for a G4 Geostorm on Earth, the last time this magnitude happened was 20 years ago in Charlotte NC, United States on May 10, 2024. (Photo by Peter Zay/Anadolu via Getty Images)

Anadolu via Getty Images

Sunspot AR3664, which was last seen blasting powerful solar explosions our direction that generated historic and widespread aurora, has rotated back into view on the surface of the sun and already unleashed an X-class flare early Monday.

NOAA’s Space Weather Prediction Center recorded a flare off the southeast limb of the sun that measured X2.8. X-flares are the strongest classification of flares although we saw several stronger flares earlier this month. The higher the number, the stronger the intensity of the flare, which can cause radio and other communication blackouts on Earth.

However, the strength of a flare is just one of many factors that impacts how solar unrest impacts systems on our planet. Aurora and disruptions to electrical systems are actually more closely associated with coronal mass ejections (CMEs), which are eruptions of charged particles that can take a few days to reach Earth. CMEs are also directional, so when one is thrown off from a sunspot that is more directly aimed at Earth, it’s more likely to result in stronger impacts.

The source of the May 10 solar superstorm that generated aurora seen in all fifty states for the first time in decades was also sunspot AR3664, when it was more directly aimed at Earth in early May. The sun rotates on its axis like Earth does, and sunspot AR3664 has spent the past few weeks on the far side of the sun that faces away from our planet, but is just now rotating back into view from our vantage point.

It seems like AR3664 still has some steam after its travels, and another sunspot, AR3691, is also growing and developing X-flare potential as its firing line approaches Earth.

Aurora Australis Appearance in Melbourne Australia

MELBOURNE, AUSTRALIA - MAY 12: Increased solar activity results in the rare Aurora Australis being ... [+] visible in southerly areas of Australia. This image taken from Macleod in suburban Melbourne, Australia on May 12th 2024. (Photo credit should read Chris Putnam/Future Publishing via Getty Images)

Future Publishing via Getty Images

This all means we could be in store for an encore of what was seen on May 10 in the next week or two.

No official forecasts have been put out yet that include a repeat of this month’s superstorm, but the sun is a very fickle thing. We will learn a lot about what’s to come by watching closely this week.

If Monday’s X-flare is any indication, there’ more excitement to come, especially as this solar cycle is thought by many to be a year or more away from its peak in activity.