Updated
Updated · India Today · Jul 1
Sunspot 4479 Hurls Earth-Bound CME as G2-G3 Geomagnetic Storm Looms on July 2
Updated
Updated · India Today · Jul 1

Sunspot 4479 Hurls Earth-Bound CME as G2-G3 Geomagnetic Storm Looms on July 2

3 articles · Updated · India Today · Jul 1

Summary

  • A full-halo CME from sunspot 4479 is heading almost directly toward Earth, with NASA and NOAA models pointing to arrival sometime on July 2 and storm strength of G2 to G3.
  • The eruption followed a June 30 solar flare that ionized the upper atmosphere and briefly knocked out HF radio signals below 25 MHz across parts of North America and the Pacific.
  • NOAA expects the solar storm to hit earlier on July 2, while NASA's model shows a later arrival, leaving the exact timing uncertain over the next 48 hours.
  • G2-G3 geomagnetic storms can disrupt satellites, GPS, radio links, power systems and polar-route airline communications, while also pushing auroras farther south than usual.
  • The event comes near the peak of Solar Cycle 25, when rising sunspot and flare activity has made disruptive space-weather events more frequent.

Insights

Is our power grid ready for tomorrow's solar storm, or could we face another 1989-style blackout?
Is this solar storm a warning shot for a future event that could sever our undersea internet cables?