In the last couple of weeks, the Sun has been relatively quiet. But that changed yesterday when a large solar flare erupted on the surface of the Sun. This M-class flare burst continued for three hours, which is a very long duration of time. During the period, the flare blasted high volumes of electromagnetic radiation and its impact was felt even on Earth. Parts of Earth experienced brief radio blackouts which caused interference with airlines navigations and ham radio, according to NASA. Now, a new worry is whether the solar flare was Earth directed and the resultant solar storm can further impact our planet. Read on to find out. Also read: Jupiter’s composition reveal shocking facts! Here’s what study says
The long-duration solar flare eruption was observed by the Solar Dynamics Observatory of NASA, which has been monitoring and studying the Sun since 2010. In the early morning of June 14, it observed elevated energy levels and a significant shift in the wavelengths in a certain region of the Sun, confirming the solar flare. The SDO registered the solar flare as M3.4 class solar flare. For the unaware, solar flares are categorized into A, B, C, M and X. The first three are significantly small flares whose impact cannot be seen on the Earth. M is a medium solar flare while X is the largest and most dangerous flare. Also read: This largest ever NASA spacecraft, Europa Clipper, will look for Aliens on Jupiter’s Moon
While it was not an X-class solar flare, it was still strong enough to cause temporary radio blackouts in the Asia-Pacific region. There are fears on whether the solar storm can hit the Earth. A solar storm brewing from an M-class flare may not cause severe damage, some disruption to GPS and navigation systems
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