Issued: 2018 Feb 15 1230 UTC
Quiet conditions (<50% probability of C-class flares)
Active conditions expected (A>=20 or K=4)
Quiet
10cm flux | Ap | |
---|---|---|
15 Feb 2018 | 075 | 015 |
16 Feb 2018 | 074 | 012 |
17 Feb 2018 | 073 | 012 |
Over the past 24 hours solar activity has been low. No significant flares have been recorded. Active Region (AR) 2699 (Mcintosh class:Dso; Mag. type:Beta) has been most active, showing considerable flux emergence and cancellation. The greater than 10MeV proton flux remained at background levels over the past 24 hours. No Earth directed Coronal Mass Ejections (CMEs) have been detected. Over the next 24 hours there is a reasonable probability that flaring activity will reach C-class levels with a small probability of M-class flares. The solar wind speed fluctuated around 310 km/s over the past 24 hours, but jumped to 350 km /s this morning with the arrival of a shock front. The total magnetic field strength has remained around 3 nT, but began fluctuating between 3 and 9 nT in the last few hours. The Bz component has fluctuated between -3 and +3 nT. Geomagnetic conditions ranged between Kp index 0-2 (NOAA) and local K index 0-2 (Dourbes) over the past 24 hours. The above mentioned shock front arrived at 07:55 UT this morning. The sudden increase in the solar wind speed (from about 310 to 350 km/s) was observed simultaneously with an increase in the density, temperature and the interplanetary magnetic field magnitude (from about 2 nT to 7 nT). Since the solar wind speed was, and is still rather low, and the Bz component of the interplanetary magnetic field was mostly positive, the shock arrival did not induce disturbed geomagnetic conditions. The shock is probably related to the CME produced at 01:25 UT on 12-Feb-2018, which was anticipated to arrive at approximately 12:00 UT today. A large coronal hole that passed the central meridian a couple of days ago may also be the cause, however the associated High Speed Stream (HSS) is expected to arrive later today / tomorrow. Enhanced solar wind conditions from the coronal hole and CME arrival are expected to cause geomagnetic conditions to be unsettled.
Today's estimated international sunspot number (ISN): 016, based on 10 stations.
Wolf number Catania | /// |
10cm solar flux | 075 |
AK Chambon La Forêt | 007 |
AK Wingst | 003 |
Estimated Ap | 003 |
Estimated international sunspot number | 023 - Based on 22 stations |
Day | Begin | Max | End | Loc | Strength | OP | 10cm | Catania/NOAA | Radio burst types | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
None |
Provided by the Solar Influences Data analysis Center© - SIDC - Processed by SpaceWeatherLive
All times in UTC
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The OVATION model predicts the Hemispheric Power Index to reach 51GW at 18:18 UTC
Minor G1 geomagnetic storm (Kp5) Threshold Reached: 01:50 UTC
Minor G1 geomagnetic storm (Kp5) Threshold Reached: 20:20 UTC
Moderate M1.05 flare
Minor R1 radio blackout in progress (≥M1 - current: M1.05)
Last X-flare | 2025/03/28 | X1.1 |
Last M-flare | 2025/04/05 | M1.0 |
Last geomagnetic storm | 2025/04/06 | Kp5 (G1) |
Spotless days | |
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Last spotless day | 2022/06/08 |
Monthly mean Sunspot Number | |
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March 2025 | 134.2 -20.4 |
April 2025 | 148.7 +14.5 |
Last 30 days | 132.7 -9.9 |