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CHANCE OF FLARES: NOAA forecasters estimate a 25% chance of M-class solar flares today.
The most likely blast-sites (sunspots AR1904 and AR1905) are not, however, facing Earth.
Any eruptions this weekend will probably miss our planet. Solar flare alerts: text, voice
COMETS IN THE SOLAR WIND: NASA's STEREO-A spacecraft is monitoring Comet ISON as it
approaches the sun for a close encounter on Nov. 28th. The latest movie from the spacecraft's
Heliospheric Imager captures not only Comet ISON but also Earth, Mercury, and Comet Encke.
Click to set the scene in motion:
In the movie, which spans a two day period from Nov. 19 to Nov. 22, the sun is to the
right, off-screen. "The dark 'clouds' coming from that direction are density enhancements
in the solar wind, and these are what are causing the ripples you see in the comet tails,"
explains Karl Battams of NASA's Comet ISON Observing Campaign.
Although the two comets seem to be experiencing the same solar wind, their tails ripple differently.
"Encke has kind of long waves in the tail, whereas ISON's seems almost like high-frequency
puffs," points out Battams.
Appearances notwithstanding, the two comets might be in two different streams of solar
wind. "The most likely explanation is that ISON is in a faster stream," he comntinues.
"Imagine holding a flag on a slightly breezy day. The flag will waft gently in the breeze.
Now imagine holding it in really strong winds. The flag will be rippling violently, but those
ripples will be smaller in amplitude."
Battams also suggests a second, more speculative possibility. You can read about it here.
Realtime Comet ISON Photo Gallery
COMET ISON, T-4 DAYS: Comet ISON is now only 4 days from perihelion. On Nov, 28th, Thanksgiving
Day in the USA, it will fly through the sun's atmosphere little more than a million kilometers
above the surface of the sun. At closest approach, the temperature of ISON's core could rise
as high as 5000o Fahrenheit--an existential challenge for an icy comet. No one knows if
it will survive. As the "final countdown" ticks to zero, photographers are taking some
marvelous parting shots. Here is Comet ISON plunging into the sunrise beside Mt. Fuji
on Nov. 22nd:
Japanese photographer Kagaya took the picture using a Canon EOS 1D C digital camera. "This
is a 3-second exposure at ISO 2000," he says. In the full-sized image, you can also see
Mercury hovering to the left of the comet.