Ik ben net buiten geweest, het is helder weer, zit op 63 graden noord, maar er is niks te zien momenteel...quote:Op donderdag 10 maart 2011 21:46 schreef -CRASH- het volgende:
Op dit moment (21:44) >>>
Poollicht misschien te zien bij heldere transparante donkere hemel en vrije horizon. Groen poollicht tot ca. 5° boven noordelijke horizon. Daarboven is rood/violet mogelijk
http://www.poollicht.info/
www.spaceweather.nlquote:A big sunspot is emerging over the sun's southeastern limb, and it is crackling with activity. NASA's Solar Dynamics Observatory recorded a surge of extreme ultraviolet radiation from the sunspot's magnetic canopy on March 21st:
This appears to be the return of old sunspot 1165, last seen in early March when it formed on the sun's southwestern limb. Since then it has been transiting the far side of the sun, apparently growing in size and restlessness. The potential for trouble will become more clear in the hours ahead as the active region emerges in full. Stay tuned.
SPOILEROm spoilers te kunnen lezen moet je zijn ingelogd. Je moet je daarvoor eerst gratis Registreren. Ook kun je spoilers niet lezen als je een ban hebt.Crazy as Always...met vleugels natuurlijk..;-0
.comquote:
Yo!quote:
Ik vergeef je....quote:Op dinsdag 22 maart 2011 00:09 schreef zenkelly het volgende:
[..]
Yo!Het was het tijdstip van schrijven en je hebt helemaaaaal gelijk natuurlijk!
www.spaceweather.com
Teringquote:Op zondag 3 april 2011 22:53 schreef -CRASH- het volgende:
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It''s huge..... Maar "gelukkig?!?!" aan de achterkant van de zon
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Net boven de horizon.quote:Op woensdag 6 april 2011 18:35 schreef -CRASH- het volgende:
Wat moet ik verstaan onder LAAG in het noorden????
Normaal zetten ze er gewoon "in het noorden" neer.quote:
quote:Solar activity heats up
April 14, 2011: If you've ever stood in front of a hot stove, watching a pot of water and waiting impatiently for it to boil, you know what it feels like to be a solar physicist.
Back in 2008, the solar cycle plunged into the deepest minimum in nearly a century. Sunspots all but vanished, solar flares subsided, and the sun was eerily quiet.
"Ever since, we've been waiting for solar activity to pick up," says Richard Fisher, head of the Heliophysics Division at NASA Headquarters in Washington DC. "It's been three long years."
Quiet spells on the sun are nothing new. They come along every 11 years or so—it's a natural part of the solar cycle. This particular solar minimum, however, was lasting longer than usual, prompting some researchers to wonder if it would ever end.
News flash: The pot is starting to boil. "Finally," says Fisher, "we are beginning to see some action."
As 2011 unfolds, sunspots have returned and they are crackling with activity. On February 15th and again on March 9th, Earth orbiting satellites detected a pair of "X-class" solar flares--the most powerful kind of x-ray flare. The last such eruption occurred back in December 2006.
Another eruption on March 7th hurled a billion-ton cloud of plasma away from the sun at five million mph (2200 km/s). The rapidly expanding cloud wasn't aimed directly at Earth, but it did deliver a glancing blow to our planet's magnetic field. The off-center impact on March 10th was enough to send Northern Lights spilling over the Canadian border into US states such as Wisconsin, Minnesota, and Michigan.
There's no known way that the wispy, vaporous remains of a relatively lightweight comet could cause a billion-ton cloud of hot plasma to fly away from the sun at 400 km/s (the observed speed of the CME). Moreover, NASA's Solar Dynamics Observatory photographed the eruption that did propel the CME into space. There's no comet in the field of viewquote:
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