Subject: MM#003 Major Flare Watch" -
Date: Sat, 12 May 2012 14:15:36 +0200

 

Dear RHESSI Collaborators,

NOAA 11476 remains unchanged in terms of its size and complexity and has only produced C-level activity over the past 24 hours, the largest being a C6.1 flare at 17:31 UT yesterday. The region still has the potential to produce another large M-class flare, particularly in the event of new flux emergence, and so the Major Flare Watch shall remain in effect for a further 24 hours.

The position of NOAA 11476 on 12-May-2012 at 07:00 UT is:

N11W09, ( 146", 229" )

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,

Ryan Milligan (QUB)

 --  MM#009 Default HESSI Target
MM#003 Major Flare Watch Dear RHESSI Collaborators,
The position of NOAA  on  at UT is:
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,
Bill Marquette (Helio Research) Ryan Milligan (QUB)
Shaun Bloomfield (Trinity College Dublin) Claire Raftery (SSL, UC Berkeley)
Received on Sat May 12 2012 - 06:15:48 MDT