2003 Halloween solar storms, sunspot region 2192

Tuesday, 28 October 2014 16:30 UTC

2003 Halloween solar storms, sunspot region 2192

It is today exactly 11 years ago that sunspot region 486 erupted with a massive X17.2 solar flare (see header image as well). This was one of many strong solar flares caused by three large and impressive sunspot regions during solar cycle 23. It was also during this period that the largest solar flare in modern times erupted: an extreme X28 (which might have been as strong as X45) solar flare on 4 November 2003 by sunspot region 486. These three regions launched numerous coronal mass ejections towards Earth causing several days of extreme geomagnetic storming. Aurora was seen from latitudes as low as Portugal and even Texas! Last year we made a special video to celebrate these so called ''Halloween solar storms of 2003'' and today we are going to dust of this video and show it one more time. But back to today: of course we still have sunspot region 2192 on the earth-facing solar disk which has been erupting with an occasional M-class solar flare today. In this article we will also take a closer look at sunspot region 2192.

11 years ago - The Halloween Solar Storms of 2003

Evolution of sunspot region 2192

Solar activity has been high since our our last update with a couple of M-class solar flares but we haven't seen an X-class solar flare. The strongest solar flare in the past 24 hours was an M6.6 (R2-moderate) solar flare at 03:32 UTC but as you might have guessed already, there were no coronal mass ejections associated with any of these events.

Sunspot region 2192 continues to slowly decay again loosing penumbral area and some smaller umbra spots. Most of the decay continues to occur in it's intermediate layout and around the leader spot but also the trailer spots seems to be decaying now. Three delta sunspots have decayed but at least four small delta sunspots remain where they are. While sunspot region 2192 remains a large and magnetically complex sunspot region we can conclude that it did loose magnetic complexity during the past 24 hours. We can still expect M-class (R1-R2) activity in the coming 24 hours but X-class solar flares are becoming less likely. We slightly lower the solar flare probability percantages today compared to yesterday.

M-class flare probability: 70% chance
X-class flare probability: 25% chance

We do need to note that sunspot region 2192 is now coming really close to the west limb making accurate measurements of this sunspot region it's complexity more and more difficult. This will likely be the last update that we can give where we can discuss how complex sunspot region 2192 is. In the next 24 to 48 hours, sunspot region 2192 will rotate off the Earth-facing soalr disk and start its 2-week transit of the far side. If it survives, it could return the second week in November.

A strong eruption from sunspot region 2192 could still result in a solar radiation storm at Earth which would impact HF radio communications at arctic latitudes.

All the other sunspot regions on the disk are unremarkable. Any future solar flares will very likely be centered around sunspot region 2192.

Images: NASA SDO and ESA/NASA SOHO.
Video: see YouTube description.

Any mentioned solar flare in this article has a scaling factor applied by the Space Weather Prediction Center (SWPC), the reported solar flares are 42% smaller than for the science quality data. The scaling factor has been removed from our archived solar flare data to reflect the true physical units.

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Current data suggests there is a slight possibility for aurora to appear at the following high latitude regions in the near future

Whitehorse, YT
Anchorage, AK, Fairbanks, AK, Utqiagvik, AK
A transequatorial coronal hole was detected in an earth-facing position on Monday, 24 March 2025

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