Tanya Melnik
519 posts





WATCH: Geomagnetic Storm Category G2 Predicted Highest Storm Level Predicted by Day: Mar 18: None (Below G1) Mar 19: G2 (Moderate) Mar 20: G1 (Minor) Issue Time: 2026 Mar 17 1836 UTC bit.ly/3wVgAKH




New flux emergence ☞ New sunspots (5) ☞ New active region ☞ New hope




Stupid sh*t conspiracy theorists say (that isn't true) - #1: Auroras are frequently visible from Florida lately because the Earth's magnetic field is rapidly weakening* Yeah, no. There has indeed been a surge in reports in the past 3-4 years. That's solar maximum, the peak of the current solar cycle (25). There were indeed fewer in the preceding 15 years, because Solar Cycle 24 was very weak. Go back to Solar Cycle 23, with comparatively ancient forecasts and nowcasting - and aurora was still seen from Florida and/or the same geomagnetic latitude (e.g. Texas) a number of times. Also, one needs to distinguish between visual sightings and photos on slow film with usually slow lenses, and very light sensitive digital with fast lenses (and in case of phones strong in-camera image processing). Current digital cameras and phone cameras pick up aurora that is well below the visual detection threshold. Btw, here's a report from Florida on 8 March 1918 - visual, not photos. * - it isn't, it has been weakening at ~5-6% per century for the past almost two centuries.















Eruptive M4.5 solar flare from active region 4294 that is now located near the western limb of the sun. Impressive field line opening, coronal wave with wiggling field lines and a Moray eel filament. A westward heading coronal mass ejection is visible in coronagraphs.











