SPACE WEATHER Current Conditions Solar Wind velocity: 335.9 km/s density:8.5 protons/cm3 explanation | more data Updated: Today at 2247 UT X-ray Solar Flares 6-hr max: M2 2040 UT Apr22 24-hr: M2 2040 UT Apr22 explanation | more data Updated: Today at 2250 UT Daily Sun: 22 Apr '01 Sunspot 9435 is growing rapidly and could soon pose a threat for substantial flares. The returning sunspot 9393 (also known as 9433) has a twisted beta-gamma magnetic field that likely harbors energy for strong M-class flares. Sunspot Number: 156 More about sunspots Updated: 21 Apr 2001 Radio Meteor Rate 24 hr max: 117 per hr Listen to the Meteor Radar! Updated: 20 Apr 2001 Interplanetary Mag. Field Btotal: 9.0 nT Bz: 6.8 nT south explanation | more data Updated: Today at 2248 UT Coronal Holes: There are no substantial coronal holes revealed in this soft x-ray image of the Sun. Image credit: Yohkoh Soft X-ray Telescope. More about coronal holes SPACE WEATHER NOAA Forecasts Solar Flares: Probabilities for a medium-sized (M-class) or a major (X-class) solar flare during the next 24/48 hours are tabulated below. Updated at 2001 Apr 22 2200 UT FLARE | 24 hr | 48 hr | CLASS M | 75 % | 75 % | CLASS X | 10 % | 10 % | Geomagnetic Storms: Probabilities for significant disturbances in Earth's magnetic field are given for three activity levels: active, minor storm, severe storm Updated at 2001 Apr 22 2200 UT Mid-latitudes | 24 hr | 48 hr | ACTIVE | 15 % | 10 % | MINOR | 10 % | 05 % | SEVERE | 05 % | 01 % | High latitudes | 24 hr | 48 hr | ACTIVE | 25 % | 15 % | MINOR | 20 % | 10 % | SEVERE | 10 % | 05 % | Web server provided by VPS Hosting | Potentially Hazardous Asteroids (PHAs) are space rocks larger than approximately 100m that can come closer to Earth than 0.05 AU. None of the known PHAs are on a collision course with our planet, although astronomers are finding new ones all the time. [more] On 22 Apr 2001 there were 304 known Potentially Hazardous Asteroids April 2001 Earth-asteroid encounters Object | Date (UTC) | Miss Distance | 2001 GT2 | 2001-Apr-01 00:09 | 0.0454 AU | 2001 HB | 2001-Apr-02 04:21 | 0.0323 AU | 2001 FA58 | 2001-Apr-02 07:56 | 0.1128 AU | 1986 PA | 2001-Apr-03 01:06 | 0.1465 AU | 2000 EE104 | 2001-Apr-12 20:37 | 0.0822 AU | 2001 GR2 | 2001-Apr-18 04:07 | 0.0761 AU | 2001 GQ2 | 2001-Apr-27 12:00 | 0.0199 AU | - TOTAL LUNAR ECLIPSE: On Jan. 9, 2001, the full Moon glided through Earth's copper-colored shadow. [gallery]
- CHRISTMAS ECLIPSE: Sky watchers across North America enjoyed a partial solar eclipse on Christmas Day 2000 [gallery]
- LEONIDS 2000: Observers around the globe enjoyed three predicted episodes of shooting stars. [gallery]
Feb. 21, 2001: Nature's Tiniest Space Junk -- Using an experimental radar at the Marshall Space Flight Center, scientists are monitoring tiny but hazardous meteoroids that swarm around our planet. Feb. 15, 2001: The Sun Does a Flip -- NASA scientists who monitor the Sun say our star's enormous magnetic field is reversing -- a sure sign that solar maximum is here. Jan. 25, 2001: Earth's Invisible Magnetic Tail -- NASA's IMAGE spacecraft, the first to enjoy a global view of the magnetosphere, spotted a curious plasma tail pointing from Earth toward the Sun. Jan. 4, 2001: Earth at Perihelion -- On January 4, 2001, our planet made its annual closest approach to the Sun. Dec. 29, 2000: Millennium Meteors -- North Americans will have a front-row seat for a brief but powerful meteor shower on January 3, 2001. Dec. 28, 2000: Galileo Looks for Auroras on Ganymede -- NASA's durable Galileo spacecraft flew above the solar system's largest moon this morning in search of extraterrestrial "Northern Lights" Dec. 22, 2000: Watching the Angry Sun -- Solar physicists are enjoying their best-ever look at a Solar Maximum thanks to NOAA and NASA satellites. MORE SPACE WEATHER HEADLINES |