Publié: 2023 Sep 19 1231 UTC
M-class flares expected (probability >=50%)
Active conditions expected (A>=20 or K=4)
Quiet
| Flux de 10 cm | Ap | |
|---|---|---|
| 19 Sep 2023 | 155 | 022 |
| 20 Sep 2023 | 157 | 007 |
| 21 Sep 2023 | 158 | 007 |
There are nine active regions visible on the disk. There have been two M-class flares in the last 24 hours, from NOAA AR 3435. The strongest was an M1.9 flare occurring at 09:38 UTC (peak). This region and NOAA AR 3436 have increased in size and complexity and can produce more M-class flares in the next 24 hours.
A partial halo CME with angular width around 150 degrees was first seen at 11:12 UTC on 18 September by LASCO-C2. The CME most likely originated (the eruption signatures are weak) in the vicinity of NOAA AR 3436 in the NW quadrant, it was slow (around 300 km/s) and mostly directed to the NW. Nevertheless, a glancing blow at the Earth can not be discarded on 22 September.
A shock was observed in DSCOVR data on 18 September at 12:57 UTC. The magnetic field jumped from 9 to 22 nT, and the solar wind speed from 420 to 550 km/s. This marks an early arrival of the 16 September CME. Later on, the solar wind speed surpassed the 600 km/s and the interplanetary magnetic field reached to 22 nT, with Bz down to -17 nT. We probably observed also some combined effects from a high speed solar wind stream. More disturbed solar wind conditions can be expected in the next 24 hours.
During the last 24 hours the geomagnetic conditions have reached moderate storm levels globally (NOAA KP 6) and minor storm levels locally (K_Bel 5), due to the ICME arrival (from the CME on 16 September). The situation is expected to subside gradually, but more disturbed periods can be expected in the next 24 hours.
Over the past 24 hours the greater than 10 MeV GOES proton flux was at nominal levels and is expected to remain so over the next 24 hours.
The greater than 2 MeV electron flux remained below the 1000 pfu threshold as measured by GOES 16. They may increase over the threshold in the next 24 hours. The 24 hour electron fluence was at normal levels and it could also increase in the next 24 hours.
Estimation du nombre international de taches solaires (ISN) pour aujourd'hui : 158, sur la base de 13 stations.
| Nombre de Wolf, observé par Catania | 170 |
| Flux solaire à 10 cm | 155 |
| AK Chambon La Forêt | 044 |
| AK Wingst | 031 |
| Ap estimé | 030 |
| Nombre international de taches solaires estimé | 130 - Basé sur 24 stations |
| Jour | Commencer | Max | Fin | Loc | Force | OP | 10cm | Catania/NOAA | Types de sursaut radio |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 19 | 0345 | 0355 | 0401 | ---- | M1.1 | F | 70/3435 | II/2 |
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 | X4.3 |
| Dernière classe M | 05/02/2026 | M1.1 |
| Dernier orage géomagnétique | 05/02/2026 | Kp5+ (G1) |
| Jours sans taches solaires | |
|---|---|
| Dernier jour sans taches solaires | 08/06/2022 |
| Nombre mensuel moyen de taches solaires | |
|---|---|
| janvier 2026 | 112.6 -11.4 |
| février 2026 | 140.8 +28.2 |
| 30 derniers jours | 124.4 +17 |