13 November 2014
20141112 Week Rotation Today Rotation Week 20141114

Subject: MM#003 Major Flare Watch" -
Date: Thu, 13 Nov 2014 00:13:24 +0000

 
Dear RHESSI Collaborators,
Solar activity has remained at a low level. NOAA region 12205 has continued to show signs of decay with further decreasing in area and number of spots. This region remains classified as a beta-gamma-delta/D-type sunspot group, but has decreased in McIntosh complexity rank from Dkc to Dac. NOAA 12205 has remained the most active spot group since the last message with having produced four C-class events. Yesterday's target, the return of the region previously designated as NOAA 12192, has rotated a small leading spot over the South East limb. Large scale loops and bright EUV emission are visible, but the majority of the region remains beyond the limb so classification of its magnetic complexity is not yet possible. The MM#003 Major Flare Watch will continue for another 24 hours as this region rotates over the limb.
The approximate position of this region on 12-Nov-2014 at 23:30 UT is:
S11E90, ( -951”, 185” )
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,
Shaun Bloomfield (Trinity College Dublin) Received on Wed Nov 12 2014 - 17:13:47 MST