With the solar maximum approaching in the next few years, the Sun's activity is rising and is expected to rise even more. We have already seen a vast number of solar flares, CMEs, solar storms, and geomagnetic storms this year. Astonishingly, the Sun has already exceeded the predicted number of sunspots that were expected in the solar maximum, according to experts. To monitor the Sun's volatile nature, NASA's Solar Dynamics Observatory (SDO) carries a full suite of instruments that help it to observe solar activity.
This NASA observatory has recently revealed that Earth could be in the firing line of a strong M2 solar flare as an Earth-facing sunspot has recently exploded, sending these flares on their way.
According to a report by spaceweather.com, NASA's Solar Dynamics Observatory (SDO) has observed a dramatic explosion of the Earth-facing Sunspot AR3425 during the late hours of September 7. Consequentially, several overlapping CMEs have been observed by experts at the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA), who are trying to determine whether any of them resulted from this sunspot explosion.
As a result, M2 solar flares have been detected being hurled towards Earth. For the unaware, solar flares are classified according to their strength on the logarithmic scale, similar to how earthquakes are measured. The smallest ones are A-class which occur at near background levels, followed by B, C, M, and X.
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The solar flare hurled towards Earth has an M2 intensity, meaning it is twice as strong as M1 solar flares. Apart from this, two other sunspots named AR3421 and AR3422 also pose a danger to Earth as they could hurl out M-class solar flares
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