Seems we have an X-class flare hitting us this weekend. Batten down the hatches boys.

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@freemo @Science

I think that that map is of where the EM (electromagnetic radiation) hit the Earth a few minutes after the solar flare erupted (traveling at the speed of light). Data suggests that the flare also produced a nice CME (coronal mass ejection -- of mostly electrons and protons). They estimate that the bulk of those particles are moving at slightly over 2 million miles per hour, so about 40 hours or so from Earth. The Earth will have moved a bit in its orbit since the CME, so those particles won't make a direct hit like the EM, but they will cause a nice geomagnetic storm. If the conditions are right, Asia should be the first to see the auroras starting about 15:00 UTC (Coordinated Universal TIme), with the show moving westward on the opposite side of the Earth from the Sun.

swpc.noaa.gov/

@Pat

No solar flares don't move that fast. Solar flares are rather slow taking 12 hours to up to 3 months to have the CME travel from the sun to the earth.

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