Double Gamma-Ray Burst Update for June 14th, 2014 ACE Solar - TopicsExpress



          

Double Gamma-Ray Burst Update for June 14th, 2014 ACE Solar Wind Telemetry shows the speed (yellow) around 375 km/s, while the density is between 6 to 7 protons/cm^3 as of 08:15 UTC this morning. NOAAs Satellite Environment shows that the new day began with an Unsettled KP-3, which calmed to KP-2 by 03:00 UTC. GOES Magnetometer and Electron Flux both show the minor perturbations. Sonomas Gamma-Ray Burst Monitor shows that we took our 4th and 5th GRBs of June this morning. The first GRB came out of the Apus Constellation at 01:04 UTC and the second from the Pegasus Constellation at 06:38 UTC. Gamma-Ray Bursts are the source of Galactic Cosmic Rays, changes in which, have been suggested to affect weather and climate, and new evidence is presented here directly linking GCRs with clouds. Clouds increase the diffuse solar radiation, measured continuously at UK surface meteorological sites since 1947. Read more from Empirical evidence for a nonlinear effect of galactic cosmic rays on clouds by R. Harrison and D. Stephenson: earthshine.dmi.dk/tellux/HarrisonStephensonGCRClouds.pdf suspicious0bservers.org/gatherer314s-notes-june-2-2014/ According to TESIS Sun Flare Monitor (GOES-15) we took a total of 12 Solar Flares yesterday, with the largest being of M2.6-Class intensity out of Active Region 2087 at 07:56 UTC. So far today, TESIS has recorded just one of the string of C-Flares to sputter out the departing Active Region 2085 at 03:48 UTC this morning. The Sunspot Number is up to 276 today, with NOAA forecasting a 70% chance of M-Flares and a 30% chance of X-Flares over the next 24 hours. Dr. Tony Phillps, of SpaceWeather, echoes NOAAs forecasters: DELAYED IMPACT? A CME expected to hit Earths magnetic field on Friday the 13th did not show up. Either it missed or, as NOAA forecasters suspect, the storm cloud is still en route. A glancing blow on June 14th could spark a G1-class geomagnetic storm. Aurora alerts: text, voice… Read, See More: spaceweather/archive.php?view=1&day=14&month=06&year=2014 Image Sources: grb.sonoma.edu/ sdo.gsfc.nasa.gov/data/ n3kl.org/sun/noaa.html cfbw/sunspotcount.htm cr0.izmiran.rssi.ru/mosc/main.htm swpc.noaa.gov/ace/ace_rtsw_data.html tesis.lebedev.ru/en/sun_flares.html?m=6&d=14&y=2014 Daily News: suspicious0bserverscollective.org/daily-news.html Evening News: suspicious0bservers.org/premium/ GONG H Alpha: halpha.nso.edu/ Moscow Neutron Monitor: cr0.izmiran.rssi.ru/mosc/main.htm BARTOL Cosmic Ray: neutronm.bartol.udel.edu//spaceweather/welcome.html U of Maryland Solar Wind Data: umtof.umd.edu/pm/ NOAA Aurora: swpc.noaa.gov/Aurora/ NOAAs Sunspot Classification: swpc.noaa.gov/ftpdir/latest/SRS.txt NOAAs Forecast Discussion: swpc.noaa.gov/ftpdir/latest/forecast_discussion.txt Sunspot Count: cfbw/sunspotcount.htm Solar Info: solen.info/solar/ solen.info/solar/coronal_holes.html
Posted on: Sat, 14 Jun 2014 08:50:48 +0000

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