- cross-posted to:
- technology@lemmy.world
- cross-posted to:
- technology@lemmy.world
Oh, good! I might finally get a break from the buttplug I lost last week.
1pm ET. So it already happened?
either it has not happened yet or it has already calmed down because QRZ.com shows everything as normal
Checking my image recordings the only thing I see as an ejection around 12 hours ago, so it would have to be a really fast burst to arrive today? Current Kp index is only at 2.3 which is pretty normal, and even NOAA’s own forecast shows nothing happening. I’d say this event is a dud.
Yep, thats prob the case
Will this affect my Super Mario 64 gameplay?
It could corrupt the save data on your cart
only for the better, now’s the time to set a new WR.
We’re free now, throw your tracking devices at big techs faces
This is the best summary I could come up with:
A geomagnetic storm is expected to surge across the Earth’s atmosphere later today as a plume of solar plasma hits our planet.
This chunk of the sun was spat out on Sunday as a magnetic filament erupted from the star’s surface, with the coronal mass ejection (CME) set to collide with the Earth at around 1 p.m.
The CME collision could lead to geomagnetic storms as intense as G2-class or even G3-class, which may trigger GPS issues, satellite problems, and auroras seen much further south than usual.
Amateur radio & #GPS users, expect disruptions on Earth’s nightside," space weather physicist Tamitha Skov posted on X, formerly Twitter, on Sunday.
CMEs are triggered by magnetic activity on the sun’s surface flinging out huge volumes of solar plasma.
“Whilst these storms cannot harm us or nature directly, they are disruptive and potentially very damaging to technology,” Huw Morgan, head of the Solar Physics group at Aberystwyth University in the United Kingdom, told Newsweek.
The original article contains 577 words, the summary contains 161 words. Saved 72%. I’m a bot and I’m open source!
Removed by mod
Somebody from lemm.ee report this failure.
Do reports only go to your own instance?