The Earth has been luckily escaping the wrath of the Sun even as it ramps up its volatility as it goes through its 11-year solar cycle. Today, Earth stands in a very difficult situation because of these constant solar storms. Some of the strongest solar storms this year were fortunately directed towards Venus and not Earth, with the most recent one coming just the previous week. But now, things are changing and a terrifying time might be coming for our planet as the same sunspot responsible for blasting powerful coronal mass ejections (CME) towards Venus is now coming to the Earth-facing solar disk. And to make matters worse, two other sunspots will be joining it and the dangers of a CME storm have increased manifold. The next few days will be a worrying time for the Earth, according to scientists. Can the strongest solar storm of them all, aG5 class solar storm, hit our planet in the coming days? Read on.
The development was reported by SpaceWeather.com which noted, “NOAA forecasters say there is a 20% chance of M-class solar flares today, but that may be an underestimate. Sunspots AR3098 and AR3101 are both increasingly active, and old sunspot AR3088 (famous for hammering Venus) is now returning over the southeast limb”.
While the two new sunspots, AR3098 and AR3101 are concerning, the biggest threat comes from AR3088. The sunspot has already survived one full rotation of the Sun and has still not dissipated. The highly unstable sunspot has shown its ferocity when it blasted continuous CME bursts at Venus. And if it explodes again now, the Earth would be its primary target.
The increase in the solar activity as well as the number of sunspots are directly related to the solar maximum phase of the Sun. The phase is part of
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