Solar activity remains at moderate levels thanks to four M-class (all R1) solar flares today. Sunspot region 2268 kicked of with an M2.0 solar flare peaking at 00:44 UTC. This event was followed by two more M-class solar flares also from sunspot region 2268 which peaked in rapid succession around 05:45 UTC: M1.6 and M1.7. This event was followed by the strongest solar flare of today thus far: sunspot region 2277 joined the party with an M2.4 solar flare. A lot of solar flares indeed but the bad news is that none of these events looked to have produced a coronal mass ejection. Could we expect more activity from these sunspot regions and what will the southern hemisphere polar coronal hole bring us?
De nombreuses personnes consultent SpaceWeatherLive pour suivre l'activité solaire ou observer les aurores boréales, mais l'augmentation du trafic engendre des coûts plus élevés pour maintenir les serveurs en ligne. Si vous appréciez SpaceWeatherLive et souhaitez soutenir le projet, vous pouvez vous abonner pour un site sans publicité ou faire un don. Grâce à votre aide, SpaceWeatherLive restera accessible !
| Dernière classe X | 04/02/2026 | X4.21 |
| Dernière classe M | 15/03/2026 | M1.0 |
| Dernier orage géomagnétique | 14/03/2026 | Kp6 (G2) |
| Jours sans taches solaires | |
|---|---|
| 365 derniers jours | 3 jours |
| 2026 | 3 jours (4%) |
| Dernier jour sans taches solaires | 24/02/2026 |
| Nombre mensuel moyen de taches solaires | |
|---|---|
| février 2026 | 78.2 -34.3 |
| mars 2026 | 83.6 +5.4 |
| 30 derniers jours | 58.7 -65.6 |