Coronal mass ejection launched throughout the X-class photo voltaic flare eruption. (Image credit score: NOAA Space Weather Prediction Center)
The solar fired off one other main eruption immediately (Nov. 14), unleashing an intense X4-class flare, the second-most highly effective eruption of 2025 thus far, from the identical hyperactive sunspot area that produced this yr’s record-setting X5 blast just days ago.
The flare peaked at 3:30 a.m. EST (0830 GMT) from sunspot AR4274, according to NOAA’s Space Weather Prediction Center. The eruption triggered robust (R3) radio blackouts throughout the sunlit facet of Earth, with probably the most extreme disruptions concentrated over central and eastern Africa.
Unlike CMEs, which launch clouds of magnetized plasma into space, solar flares release bursts of electromagnetic radiation that reach Earth in about 8 minutes. Today’s flare rapidly ionized the upper atmosphere, disrupting long-range radio communications on the sunlit portion of Earth.
Radio blackouts associated with the X4 solar flare on Nov. 14. (Image credit: NOAA Space Weather Prediction Center)
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