Solar Terrestrial Activity Report

Activity chart

Last major update issued on September 22, 2015 at 05:30 UT.

Charts (* = updated daily) Data and archive
  Solar wind (*) Solar and geomagnetic data - last month (*)
  Electron fluence (*) Archived daily reports and monthly data from 2003.01 (September 1, 2015)
Solar cycle Solar cycles 23-24 (September 1, 2015) Historical solar and geomagnetic data charts 1954-2006 (April 5, 2007)
  Cycle 24 progress (September 1, 2015) Noon SDO sunspot count 1K Reference: 4K (large file) (*)
  Solar cycles 1-24 (July 17, 2015) POES auroral activity level October 2009 - December 2012
  Comparison of cycles 21, 22, 23 and 24 (September 1, 2015) 3rd SSN Workshop, Tucson, 2013
  Comparison of cycles 12, 13, 14, 16 and 24 (September 1, 2015) 4th SSN Workshop, Locarno, 2014
  Solar polar fields vs solar cycles (September 16, 2015)  

Recent activity

The geomagnetic field was quiet to unsettled on September 21. Solar wind speed at SOHO ranged between 446 and 672 km/s.

Solar flux at 20h UTC on 2.8 GHz was 103.4 (decreasing 17.8 over the last solar rotation). The 90 day 10.7 flux at 1 AU was 105.6. The Potsdam WDC planetary A index was 8 (STAR Ap - based on the mean of three hour interval ap indices: 8.1). Three hour interval K indices: 33222111 (planetary), 33222312 (Boulder).

The background x-ray flux is at the class B2 level.

At the time of counting spots (see image time), spots were observed in 10 active regions using 2K resolution (SN: 178) and 8 active regions using 1K resolution (SN: 112) SDO images on the visible solar disk.

Region 12415 [S19W64] decayed slowly and quietly.
Region 12418 [S15W35] decayed slowly and quietly.
Region 12419 [N12W30] decayed further and could soon become spotless.
Region 12420 [N10E61] was quite active during the first hours of the days, then became quiet. The region appears to be slowly decaying in the central section.

Spotted regions not numbered (or interpreted differently) by SWPC:
S4765 [S19W72] was quiet and stable.
S4766 [N17E16] was quiet and stable.
S4771 [N15E46] developed quickly during the latter half of the day.
S4772 [S12W03] was quiet and stable.
New region S4773 [S18E28] was observed with a penumbra spot.
New region S4774 [S09E17] emerged with a penumbra spot.

C2+ flares:

Magnitude Peak time (UTC) Location AR Recorded by Comment
C2.8 00:21 N09E79 12420 GOES15  
C4.2 02:04 N08E83 12420 GOES15  
C8.8 05:18 N08E79 12420 GOES15  

Flare activity (SDO/EVE/ESP XRS-B proxy)

Coronal mass ejections (CMEs)

September 20: A partial halo CME was observed after an M2 LDE in AR 12415. It is uncertain if this CME has any Earth directed components.
September 19, 21: No obviously Earth directed CMEs were observed in available LASCO imagery.

Coronal holes

[Coronal hole history (since October 2002)]
[Compare today's report to the situation one solar rotation ago: 28 days ago 27 days ago 26 days ago]

A recurrent trans equatorial coronal hole (CH691) will rotate across the central meridian on September 21-22.

Propagation

Long distance low and medium frequency (below 2 MHz) propagation along paths north of due west over upper middle latitudes is poor. Propagation on long distance northeast-southwest paths is poor to fair.

Forecast

The geomagnetic field is expected to be quiet to unsettled on September 22-23 with some uncertainty for September 23 should the CME observed on September 20 reach Earth. Effects from CH691 could cause quiet to minor storm conditions on September 24-25.

Coronal holes (1) Coronal mass ejection (2) M and X class flares (3)
     

1) Effects from a coronal hole could reach Earth within the next 5 days. When the high speed stream has arrived the color changes to green.
2) Effects from a CME are likely to be observed at Earth within 96 hours.
3) There is a possibility of either M or X class flares within the next 48 hours.

Green: 0-30% probability, Yellow: 30-70% probability, Red: 70-100% probability.

Active solar regions


(Click on image for 2K resolution) Compare to the previous day's image.

0.5K image

When available the active region map has a coronal hole polarity overlay where red (pink) is negative and blue is positive.

Data for all numbered solar regions according to the Solar Region Summary provided by NOAA/SWPC. Comments are my own, as is the STAR spot count (spots observed at or inside a few hours before midnight) and data for regions not numbered by SWPC or where SWPC has observed no spots. SWPC active region numbers in the table below and in the active region map above are the historic SWPC/USAF numbers.

Active region Date numbered
detected
Spot count Location at midnight Area Classification SDO / HMI 4K continuum
image with magnetic polarity overlays
Comment
SWPC Magnetic
(SDO)
SWPC STAR Current Previous
2K 1K
12415 2015.09.10
2015.09.11
4 4 2 S18W69 0160 EAO CAO

area: 0090

location: S19W64

SWPC data includes AR S4765

12418 2015.09.12
2015.09.13
4 13 4 S15W35 0180 CAO CAO images/AR_12418_20150920_2345.png area: 0250
12419 2015.09.13
2015.09.15
4 7 3 N13W32 0020 CRO BXO location: N12W30
S4761 2015.09.16       N23W19            
S4763 2015.09.17       S27W47            
S4765 2015.09.18   2 1 S19W72 0100   CSO  
S4766 2015.09.18   9 3 N17E16 0020   BXO images/AR_S4766_20150921_2345.png images/AR_S4766_20150920_2345.png  
S4767 2015.09.18       S27W05            
12420 2015.09.19
2015.09.20
16 21 10 N10E64 090 EKC EKO area: 0420

location: N10E61

S4771 2015.09.20   18 8 N15E46 0050   DRI  
S4772 2015.09.20   2 1 S12W03 0006   BXO  
S4773 2015.09.21   1   S18E28 0002   AXX    
S4774 2015.09.21   1   S09E17 0002   AXX    
Total spot count: 28 78 32  
Sunspot number: 68 178 112  (total spot count + 10 * number of spotted regions)
Weighted SN: 51 105 59  (Sum of total spot count + classification weighting for each AR. Classification weighting: X=0, R=3, A/S=5, H/K=10)
Relative sunspot number (Wolf number): 75 98 95 k * (sunspot number)
As of July 1, 2015: k = 1.1 for SWPC, k = 0.55 for MSN 2K, k = 0.85 for MSN 1K (MSN=Magnetic Sunspot Number)

Monthly solar cycle data

Month Average solar flux International sunspot number
(WDC-SILSO) (4)
Smoothed sunspot number (4) Average ap
(3)
Measured 1 AU
2014.02 170.3
(cycle peak)
166.3 146.1 (cycle peak) 110.5 (+1.2) 10.70
2014.04 143.9 144.8 112.5 116.4 (+2.1) (solar max) 7.88
2014.05 129.7 132.9 112.5 115.0 (-1.4) 5.75
2014.06 122.0 125.8 102.9 114.1 (-0.9) 6.72
2014.07 137.4 141.8 100.2 112.6 (-1.5) 4.50
2014.08 124.7 127.9 106.9 108.3 (-4.3) 7.71
2014.09 146.6 148.1 130.0 101.9 (-6.4) 9.78
2014.10 153.4 152.9 90.0 97.4 (-4.5) 8.96
2014.11 154.8 151.4 103.6 95.0 (-2.4) 9.33
2014.12 158.7 153.8 112.9 92.6 (-2.4) 11.24
2015.01 141.9 137.3 93.0 89.8 (-2.8) 9.46
2015.02 129.1 126.0 66.7 86.6 (-3.2) 9.92
2015.03 125.9 124.6 54.5 (82.1 projected, -4.5) 16.14
2015.04 128.8 129.7 78.0 (78.0 projected, -4.1) 10.73
2015.05 120.0 122.6 90.0 (75.3 projected, -2.7) 8.29
2015.06 122.3 126.1 68.3 (71.6 projected, -3.7) 13.15
2015.07 107.0 110.8 66.4 (67.9 projected, -3.7) 8.83
2015.08 105.4 108.0 64.6 (66.7 projected, -1.2) 14.58
2015.09 (94.1)   38.6 (2A) / 55.2 (2B) / 70.4 (2C) (67.0 projected, +0.3) (18.3)

1) Running average based on the daily 20:00 UTC observed solar flux value at 2800 MHz.
2A) Current impact on the monthly sunspot number based on the Boulder (NOAA/SWPC) sunspot number (accumulated daily sunspots / month days).
2B) Boulder SN current month average to date.
2C) STAR SDO 1K Wolf number 30 day average.
3) Running average based on the quicklook and definitive Potsdam WDC ap indices. Values in red are based on the definitive international GFZ Potsdam WDC ap indices.
4) Updated to new data set from WDC-SILSO on July 1, 2015

This report has been prepared by Jan Alvestad. It is based on the analysis of data from whatever sources are available at the time the report is prepared. All time references are to Universal Time. Comments and suggestions are always welcome.

SDO images are courtesy of NASA/SDO and the AIA, EVE, and HMI science teams.