16 June 2014
20140615 Week Rotation Today Rotation Week 20140617

Subject: MM#009 Default HESSI Target
Date: Mon, 16 Jun 2014 10:46:16 -0700

 

Dear RHESSI Collaborators,

The level of solar activity is low-to-moderate. Yesterday's target, the (still) un-numbered region at the South-East limb was responsible for moderate C-class activity. On the other hand, two low M-class and two high C-class flares originated behind the SW limb (likely from NOAA 12085 and 12084). The flare site has now rotated far enough behind the E-limb that further significant flares from the region are not expected. The most complex region on disk is NOAA 12089 (showing a beta-gamma- delta magnetic classification), and has released a series of low C-class flares over the previous 12 hours. Continuing flux emergence is evident, as well as some shearing, as negative polarity flux flows into the following positive polarity spots, forming a double polarity separation line. Moderate C-class activity is expected, with a chance for a low M-class flare.

The position of NOAA 12089 on 16-June-2014 17:40 UT is:

N18W48, ( 666", 280" )

See http://www.SolarMonitor.org for images and http://solar.physics.montana.edu/max_millennium/ops/observing.shtml for a description of the current Max Millennium Observing Plan.

Regards,

Paul Higgins (Trinity College Dublin/LMSAL) Received on Mon Jun 16 2014 - 11:47:26 MDT