Publié: 2020 Jan 10 1230 UTC
Quiet conditions (<50% probability of C-class flares)
Quiet (A<20 and K<4)
Proton event expected (10 pfu at >10 MeV)
| Flux de 10 cm | Ap | |
|---|---|---|
| 10 Jan 2020 | 074 | 008 |
| 11 Jan 2020 | 074 | 007 |
| 12 Jan 2020 | 074 | 007 |
The solar activity has been at low levels over the past 24 hours. Two small bipolar sunspots are currently visible on the disc: Catania sunspots group 26 (NOAA AR-2756) in the North-West quadrant of the Sun, and Catania sunspot group 27, whish is the region close to the equator that turned over the East limb on Jan 07 and produced a narrow coronal mass ejection. No significant flaring activity has been observed in these regions and the X-ray flux remained below C-level. The solar activity is expected to remain at low levels with a small chances of C-class flare and possibly slow coronal mass ejections for the next 24 hours.
No earth-directed coronal mass ejection was identified in the available coronagraphic imagery. The greater than 10 MeV proton flux was at nominal values.
The solar wind environment near Earth was under the influence of the coronal hole high-speed streams. The solar wind speed increased from 400 km/s to about 590 km/s, the total magnetic field fluctuated between 2 nT and 7.6 nT, and the southern component of the magnetic filed was between -6 nT and 5.3 nT (as recorded by the ACE spacecraft). Currently the solar wind speed is decreasing and ranges around 500 km/s. We expect the solar wind parameters to return slowly towards an ambient background and slow solar wind speed regime in the next two days. An extension to the North Polar coronal hole (positive polarity), and a positive polarity equatorial coronal hole reached the central meridian today. The high-speed stream coming from those two coronal holes is expected to enhance the solar wind environment near Earth in more than 2-3 days from now.
Quiet to unsettled geomagnetic conditions were observed in response to the solar wind enhancement. Quiet to unsettle conditions is expected for the next 24 hours.
Estimation du nombre international de taches solaires (ISN) pour aujourd'hui : 000, sur la base de 16 stations.
| Nombre de Wolf, observé par Catania | 016 |
| Flux solaire à 10 cm | 074 |
| AK Chambon La Forêt | 016 |
| AK Wingst | 012 |
| Ap estimé | 012 |
| Nombre international de taches solaires estimé | 015 - Basé sur 18 stations |
| Jour | Commencer | Max | Fin | Loc | Force | OP | 10cm | Catania/NOAA | Types de sursaut radio | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Aucun | ||||||||||
Données fournies par le Solar Influences Data analysis Center© - SIDC - Traité par SpaceWeatherLive
Toutes les heures sont indiquées en UTC
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 | 25/02/2026 | M2.4 |
| Dernier orage géomagnétique | 22/02/2026 | Kp5+ (G1) |
| Jours sans taches solaires | |
|---|---|
| 365 derniers jours | 3 jours |
| 2026 | 3 jours (5%) |
| Dernier jour sans taches solaires | 24/02/2026 |
| Nombre mensuel moyen de taches solaires | |
|---|---|
| janvier 2026 | 112.6 -11.4 |
| février 2026 | 74.6 -38 |
| 30 derniers jours | 79 -41.8 |