Bad Astronomy

Boom! The Sun Blurts Out an X-Class Flare!

solar flare
A huge sunspot unleashed a big solar flare on Tuesday morning; you can see it on the left of the Sun’s disk.

Photo by NASA/SDO/Helioviewer.org

Remember that ginormous sunspot that was seen in January and was so huge and strong it actually survived long enough to be brought back around the far side of the Sun and face us again in early February?

Incredibly, it’s still there! And it just announced its return by literally exploding, blasting out a very respectable X-class flare. It started at about 00:30 UTC on Tuesday morning (7:30 p.m. Eastern time), and was still ongoing when I wrote this post (at 01:30 UTC).

The image at the top of this post is from the Solar Dynamic Observatory, taken in the ultraviolet where flares are very obvious. As I’ve described on the blog before, solar flares are where the huge magnetic energies stored in sunspots get let loose all at once, creating an explosion that dwarfs all of humanity’s weapons combined. This flare was accompanied by a spectacular eruptive prominence as well, a towering plume of solar plasma bursting out into space:

solar flare
Close-up on the flare and the prominence. The X-shaped lines are the way the detector reacts to too much light; they’re not real.

Photo by NASA/SDO/Helioviewer.org

Gorgeous. But terrifying to think of the energy being violently released! I’m glad it’s 150 million kilometers away, and facing away from us. The classification of the flare is X 4.9, because that’s where it peaked on the detectors on the GOES satellite’s X-ray detectors:

X-rays from the flare
X-ray strength of the flare, measured by the GOES satellite. The red line (which shows “softer” less energetic X-rays associated with flares) peaked at X4.9, which is pretty strong, the strongest we’ve seen from this sunspot yet.

Plot by the Space Weather Prediction Center

That plot shows the X-ray emission (technically the flux, the amount detected) over time, and the flare is pretty obvious. The plot tick marks are logarithmic, but the flare class is linear, so the first line going into the X range is X1, then X2, which is twice as bright as X1, then X3, which is three times as bright as X1, and so on. The flare is currently fading. Last month this spot blew out an X1 flare; this one was nearly five times as powerful.

But this sunspot is coming back around now. Over the next week the Sun’s rotation will bring it back to the center of the Sun’s disk, before once again sweeping it around to the Sun’s far side. We’ll have to keep our eyes on this one. A big flare can block radio transmissions, damage satellites, hurt astronauts in orbit, and (on the plus side) create dramatic aurorae. Let’s hope for the latter, but not the three former!

Stay tuned to Spaceweather.com for more info.

Correction, Feb. 25 at 16:30 UTC: I originally mislabled the red line in the caption of the graph, saying it was from higher-energy X-rays. My apologes; it’s been corrected.