A sunspot unleashed a chain of solar flares last Saturday, May 22, jamming radio signals over North America and Southeast Asia and potentially causing a disturbance to Earth's magnetic field.
The National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA) recorded a total of 12 solar flares erupting from sunspot AR2824 within a day. Ten of those were weak and had few noticeable consequences while the remaining two were M-class flares, which could cause brief radio blackouts and minor geomagnetic storms.
The solar flares were accompanied by multiple overlapping coronal mass ejections (CME), or large eruptions of magnetized plasma from the sun's corona. The National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) predicted that at least one of the CMEs would graze Earth's magnetic field on May 26.
The solar event caused shortwave radio blackouts over North America on May 21 and Southeast Asia on May 22. Ham radio operators, aviators and mariners might have noticed unusual propagation at frequencies below 20 megahertz (MHz). (Related: The new solar cycle bares its teeth: Powerful solar flare jams radio signals over the Pacific Ocean.)
New Mexico-based amateur astronomer Thomas Ashcraft detected a shortwave radio burst that was so loud "it drowned out lightning static from a severe local thunderstorm," he said. The radio burst hit Earth at around 9:30 p.m. and coincided with a highly energized and dynamic M-class solar flare.
"I was recording audio at 22 MHz and 21 MHz, and my radio spectrograph was operating from 30 MHz down to 15 MHz. Strong solar radio emissions were present at all frequencies," the astronomer said.
Solar radio bursts are classified into five types based largely on how they appear in dynamic spectrum observations from radio spectrographs. Ashcraft recorded a mix of Type II and Type V radio emissions. These are caused, respectively, by shock waves and electron beams moving through the sun's atmosphere in the aftermath of strong solar flares.
More radio outbursts could be forthcoming as sunspot AR2824 continued to flare on May 23. The upcoming CME that the NOAA predicted could also spark auroras as well as a geomagnetic storm.
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