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Subject: MM#009 Default HESSI Target Date: Mon, 17 Mar 2014 11:12:05 -0700 Dear RHESSI Collaborators, The level of solar activity is low. Yesterday's target region (NOAA 12003) has rotated over the limb. Both NOAA 12002 and 12006 were responsible for C-class activity since the previous message. NOAA 12002, the most complex region on disk (now designated as a beta-gamma magnetic classification), released the largest event since the previous message, a C2.0 flare on 17-Mar-2014 at 00:45 UT. There is evidence for a small amount of flux emergence in the following portion of the region, where its X-ray activity appears to be concentrated. Further low C-class activity is expected, with a chance for a high C-class event. The position of NOAA 12002 on 17-Mar-2014 at 18:15 UT is: S18W54, ( 743", -229" ) See http://www.SolarMonitor.org for images and http://solar.physics.montana.edu/max_millennium/ops/observing.shtml for a description of the current Max Millennium Observing Plan. Regards, Paul Higgins (Trinity College Dublin/LMSAL) Received on Mon Mar 17 2014 - 12:12:25 MDT |
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