Subject: MM#009 Default HESSI Target
Date: Tue, 12 Aug 2014 15:32:20 +0100

 

Dear RHESSI Collaborators,

The level of solar activity is very low. Yesterday's target region NOAA 12139 has now rotated onto the visible disk to enable classification. This region displays the characteristics of a beta/D-type sunspot group, but may have small scale magnetic mixing in its intermediate portion (i.e., potentially a beta-gamma classification). 12139 has continued to be the source of B-class activity, producing two flare events since the last email. Further B-class activity is expected over the next 24 hours, with a chance for a low-to-mid C-class flare.

The position of NOAA 12139 on 12-Aug-2014 at 14:30 UT is:

N14E60, ( -797", 176" )

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 Tue Aug 12 2014 - 08:32:36 MDT