In the last two weeks, our Sun has witnessed a period of excessively high solar activity and much of it has directly impacted Earth. In these 46 days, there have been 13 solar storm events and many solar flare eruptions that have caused trouble for various geoeffective regions. From radio blackouts to GPS disruptions and more, these events have troubled airlines, mariners, drone pilots as well as ham radio operators. But the central question is why has our Sun gone berserk? Find out the secret.
In the month of January, the first 15 days were troublesome with multiple solar storms and at least a couple of solar flare eruptions that shook the Earth. The most notable of them all was an X-class flare explosion that caused radio blackout in Australia and New Zealand. And again last week, the Earth was hit by three separate solar storms as well as an X1-class solar flare eruption that affected South America and the pacific region.
We also saw the number of sunspots on the Sun in the Month of January reach a 9-year high with a total of 144 sunspots. At one point, there were 11 different sunspots on the Earth-facing solar disk. All of these developments have concerned the astronomers as the Sun's onslaught does not seem to stop anytime soon.
On February 13, the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration gave an update warning that more solar storms could be coming for the Earth as a result of “a number of sunspot groups [that] are present on the visible solar disk”.
All of this is happening because the Sun is nearing the peak of its solar cycle, a phase known as the solar maximum. Currently, the Sun is in its 25th solar cycle. For the unaware, the solar cycle is an 11-year period where the Sun undergoes changes in its magnetic
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