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September 2005
Solar Minimum Explodes Posted: Friday, September 16, 2005 by Science at NASA Huntsville AL (SPX), spacedaily.com
Just one week ago, on Sept. 7th, a huge sunspot rounded the sun's eastern limb. As soon as it appeared, it exploded, producing one of the brightest x-ray solar flares of the Space Age. In the days that followed, the growing spot exploded eight more times. Each powerful "X-flare" caused a shortwave radio blackout on Earth and pumped new energy into a radiation storm around our planet. The blasts hurled magnetic clouds toward Earth, and when they hit, on Sept 10th and 11th, ruby-red auroras were seen as far south as Arizona.
So this is solar minimum?
Actually, solar minimum, the lowest point of the sun's 11-year activity cycle, isn't due until 2006, but forecasters expected 2005, the eve of solar minimum, to be a quiet year on the sun.
It has not been quiet. 2005 began with an X-flare on New Year's Day--a sign of things to come. Since then we've experienced 4 severe geomagnetic storms and 14 more X-flares.
"That's a lot of activity," says solar physicist David Hathaway of the National Space Science and Technology Center in Huntsville, Alabama.
Compare 2005 to the most recent Solar Max: "In the year 2000," he recalls, "there were 3 severe geomagnetic storms and 17 X-flares." 2005 registers about the same in both categories. Solar minimum is looking strangely like Solar Max.
Scientists like Hathaway track the 11-year solar cycle by counting sunspots. When sunspot numbers peak, that's Solar Max, and when they ebb, that's solar minimum.
This is supposed to work because sunspots are the main sources of solar activity: Sunspot magnetic fields become unstable and explode. The explosion produces a flash of electromagnetic radiation-a solar flare. It can also hurl a billion-ton cloud of magnetized gas into space-a coronal mass ejection or "CME."
When the CME reaches Earth, it sparks a geomagnetic storm and we see auroras. CMEs can also propel protons toward Earth, producing a radiation storm dangerous to astronauts and satellites. All these things come from sunspots.
As expected, sunspot numbers have declined since 2000, yet solar activity persists. How can this be?
Hathaway answers: "The sunspots of 2005, while fewer, have done more than their share of exploding." Consider sunspot 798/808, the source of the Sept 7th superflare and eight lesser X-flares. All by itself, this sunspot has made Sept. 2005 the most active month on the sun since March 1991.
Weird? Much about the sun's activity cycle remains unknown, Hathaway points out. "X-ray observations of flares by NOAA's Earth-orbiting satellites began in 1975, and CMEs were discovered only a few years earlier by the 7th Orbiting Solar Observatory. Before the 1970s, our records are spotty."
This means we don't know what is typical. Scientists have monitored only three complete solar cycles using satellite technology. "It's risky to draw conclusions" from such a short span of data, he says.
Hathaway offers a cautionary tale: Before 2005, the last solar minimum was due in 1996 and the sun, at the time, seemed to be behaving perfectly: From late-1992 until mid-1996, sunspots began to disappear and there were precisely zero X-flares during those long years. It was a time of quiet. Then, in 1996 when sunspot counts finally reached their lowest value-bang!-an X-flare erupted.
"The sun can be very unpredictable," says Hathaway, which is something NASA planners must take into account when they send humans back to the Moon and on to Mars.
Returning to 2005: is this year an aberration-or a normal rush to the bottom of the solar cycle? "We need to observe more solar cycles to answer that question," says Hathaway. "And because each cycle lasts 11 years, observing takes time."
Meanwhile, Hathaway is waiting for 2006 when solar minimum finally arrives. Who knows what the Sun will do then?
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Sun Unleashes 5 Major Flares, Earth May Soon Get Pounded Posted: Saturday, September 10, 2005 Robert Roy Britt Senior Science Writer SPACE.com
An ongoing series of major solar flares, including one late Friday, could disrupt communications on Earth and generate colorful sky shows for people at high northern latitudes over the weekend. Even more serious effects are possible next week.
The spate of activity from the Sun is being generated by a large sunspot named 798. Sunspots are cooler and darker regions of pent-up magnetic activity. When they unleash their energy, it's a bit like the top coming off a shaken champagne bottle.
Full Article : news.yahoo.com
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Unexpected Stone Age Find in South Africa Posted: Friday, September 2, 2005 By Michael Wines, nytimes.com
Serendipity struck scientists touring a visitors center under construction at the Cradle of Humankind World Heritage Site, a complex area of caves north of Johannesburg that are home to the highest concentration of remains of mankind's earliest known ancestors.
While being shown a retail area under construction, archaeologists spotted a trove of Stone Age tools and artifacts lying in a seam of gravel unearthed just 20 inches below the surface.
The discovery, which filled three boxes with stone axes, knives, cleavers and other tools said to be between 500,000 and 1.8 million years old, was a "huge surprise to all of us," said Rob King, the chief executive of Maropeng Africa, the company that will manage the visitors center, which is scheduled to open in December.
Source: www.nytimes.com/2005/09/02/international/africa/03dig-brief.html
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