12 June 2014
20140611 Week Rotation Today Rotation Week 20140613

Subject: MM#003 Major Flare Watch" -
Date: Thu, 12 Jun 2014 11:50:42 +0100

 

Dear RHESSI Collaborators,

Solar activity continues to be at high levels. NOAA 12087 has remained the most flare productive region on the visible disk. This region has now been reclassified as a beta-gamma/D-type sunspot group after rotating away from the limb. NOAA 12087 was the source of 5 C-class flares and 3 M-class flares since yesterday's message (an M3.9 flare on 11-Jun-2014 at 20:53 UT, an M2.0 flare on 12-Jun-2014 at 04:14 UT and an M2.7 flare on 12-Jun-2014 at 10:14 UT). The MM#003 Major Flare Watch will continue for at least the next 24-48 hours, as NOAA 12087 has the potential for further flaring above the M5 level.

The position of NOAA 12087 on 12-Jun-2014 at 11:00 UT is:

S18E50, ( -690", -300" )

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,

Shaun Bloomfield (Trinity College Dublin) Received on Thu Jun 12 2014 - 04:50:55 MDT