Affichage des archives de jeudi, 11 juin 2026

Bulletin quotidien sur l'activité solaire et géomagnétique du SIDC

Publié: 2026 Jun 11 1233 UTC

Prévisions SIDC

Éruptions solaires

C-class flares expected, (probability >=50%)

Géomagnétisme

Active conditions expected (A>=20 or K=4)

Moniteur de Flux de Proton

Quiet

Flux de 10 cmAp
11 Jun 2026122021
12 Jun 2026120037
13 Jun 2026120027

Régions solaires actives et éruptions solaires

Solar flaring activity was low over the past 24 hours, with several C-class flares recorded. The largest flare was a C9.0 flare (SIDC Flare 7927), peaking at 08:28 UTC on June 11, associated with SIDC Sunspot Group 870 (NOAA Active Region 4465; magnetic type beta- gamma). There are currently five numbered active regions on the visible solar disk. SIDC Sunspot Group 870, which remains the most complex active region on the solar disk, was the main driver of the flaring activity observed over the past 24 hours. Low flaring activity was also produced by SIDC Sunspot Group 884 (NOAA Active Region 4456), which has now fully rotated behind the west limb, and by active region from behind the east limb. The remaining active regions are relatively simple (magnetic type alpha or beta) and did not produce any significant flaring activity. Solar flaring activity is expected to remain low over the next 24 hours, with C-class flares very likely and a chance of M-class flares.

Éjection de masse coronale

A halo coronal mass ejection (SIDC CME 675) was detected in SOHO/LASCO-C2 data from 00:36 UTC on June 11. The CME was directed primarily towards the northeast from Earth's perspective and was associated with a long-duration C6.7 flare (SIDC Flare 7923), peaking at 00:02 UTC on June 11, produced by SIDC Sunspot Group 870 (NOAA Active Region 4465), as well as with Type II and Type IV radio emissions detected at 00:13 UTC and 00:28 UTC on June 11, respectively. Associated coronal dimming and an EUV wave were also observed in SDO/AIA data. The bulk of the ejecta is expected to miss Earth, although a glancing blow could be possible on June 13. Follow up analysis indicated that the CMEs reported yesterday, SIDC CME 673 and SIDC CME 674, first observed in SOHO/LASCO-C2 from around 16:36 UTC and 21:36 UTC on June 9, respectively, may also result in glancing blows at Earth around June 13, although confidence remains low.

Vent solaire

Over the past 24 hours, solar wind parameters (SOLAR-1 and DSCOVR) reflected near slow solar wind conditions. The solar wind speed ranged between 360 and 400 km/s. The interplanetary magnetic field remained below 6 nT, later increasing to values up to 10 nT. The magnetic field orientation was predominantly in the positive sector (field directed away from the Sun). Solar wind conditions are expected to become slightly elevated over the next 24 hours due to the expected arrival of a high-speed stream from the negative polarity coronal hole SIDC Coronal Hole 147, with a chance of a weak enhancement from late on June 13 due to possible glancing blows from the June 9 and June 11 CMEs (SIDC 673-675).

Géomagnétisme

Geomagnetic conditions were quiet to unsettled both globally and locally over Belgium (NOAA Kp = 1 to 3; K-Bel = 1 to 3). Mostly quiet to unsettled geomagnetic conditions are expected over the next hours. From late on June 11, active conditions are expected, with a possible isolated minor to moderate storm interval in response to the arrival of the high- speed stream from a negative polarity coronal hole (SIDC Coronal Hole 147).

Niveaux de flux de protons

The greater than 10 MeV proton flux, as measured by GOES-18, was below the 10pfu threshold level over the past 24 hours and is expected to remain so over the next 24 hours.

Flux d'électrons sur l'orbite géostationnaire

The greater than 2 MeV electron flux, as measured by GOES-19, was mostly below the 1000 pfu threshold over the past 24 hours. The greater than 2 MeV electron flux is expected to remain below the 1000 pfu threshold over the next 24 hours. The 24-hour electron fluence was at normal to moderate levels and is expected to be these levels over the next 24 hours.

Estimation du nombre international de taches solaires (ISN) pour aujourd'hui : 094, sur la base de 17 stations.

Indices solaires pour 10 Jun 2026

Nombre de Wolf, observé par Catania112
Flux solaire à 10 cm124
AK Chambon La Forêt014
AK Wingst010
Ap estimé008
Nombre international de taches solaires estimé114 - Basé sur 19 stations

Résumé des événements marquants

JourCommencerMaxFinLocForceOP10cmCatania/NOAATypes de sursaut radio
Aucun

Données fournies par le Solar Influences Data analysis Center© - SIDC - Traité par SpaceWeatherLive

Toutes les heures sont indiquées en UTC

<< Aller à l'aperçu quotidien

Dernières nouvelles

Aidez SpaceWeatherLive.com !

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 !

Aucune publicité avec l'abonnement SWL Pro !
Aucune publicité avec l'abonnement SWL Pro ! Abonnements
Soutenir SpaceWeatherLive avec nos produits dérivés
Découvrez nos produits dérivés

La Météo Spatiale en faits

Dernière classe X03/06/2026X1.0
Dernière classe M06/06/2026M1.8
Dernier orage géomagnétique11/06/2026Kp5 (G1)
Jours sans taches solaires
365 derniers jours3 jours
20263 jours (2%)
Dernier jour sans taches solaires24/02/2026
Nombre mensuel moyen de taches solaires
mai 2026101.4 +22.1
juin 2026127.7 +26.3
30 derniers jours110.7 +16.8

A ce jour dans l'histoire*

Éruptions solaires
12001X1.12
22003M4.44
32014M3.77
42022M3.4
52024M3.22
DstG
11990-150G4
21983-127G4
31991-114G4
42005-106G2
52025-104G3
*depuis 1994

Aurora on this day in history

No observations submitted for this day in history. If you've observed the aurora and you have some amazing photos to show off, submit your observations now!
Submit your aurora observation

Les réseaux sociaux