Severe Geomagnetic Storm

We are at the full moon, and we begin a new HF on Red 8 Skywalker tomorrow.

Spaceweather.com

CME IMPACT SPARKS SEVERE STORM: Arriving about 6 hours later than expected, a CME hit Earth’s magnetic field on Sept. 16th (2341 UT). The impact sparked a G4-class (Severe) geomagnetic storm with auroras sighted as far south as the Texas Panhandle. The storm has subsided, but it’s not over. Storm levels are now fluctuating between G1 (Minor) and G3 (Strong) as Earth moves through the CME’s wake. Aurora alerts: SMS Text

Full moonlight was supposed to spoil the show, but the auroras were bright enough to compete with the Harvest Moon. Paul Robinson sends this picture from Boulder, Colorado:

“Red rays were dimly visible to the unaided eye for about 5 minutes,” says Robinson. “I photographed them using my Samsung S24 phone in night mode.”

Photos are coming in from Europe and many US states. Browse the real time aurora gallery for the latest.

Realtime Aurora Photo Gallery
Free:
Spaceweather.com Newsletter

PARTIAL ECLIPSE OF THE HARVEST MOON: This week’s full Moon is special for several reasons.

(1) It’s the Harvest Moon, the full Moon closest to the autumnal equinox.

(2) It’s a perigee Moon, slightly closer to Earth than usual. And,

(3) It’s going to be partially eclipsed.

This animation created by reader Peter Zimnikoval shows the Moon grazing Earth’s shadow during the early UTC hours of Sept. 18th:

For sky watchers in the Americas, the eclipse occurs on Sept. 17th. Peak coverage occurs at 10:44 p.m. EDT (7:44 p.m. PDT), when a little more than 8 percent of the Moon will be in shadow.

Mainstream media stories are trumpeting this as a “supermoon eclipse.” Indeed, it is a supermoon, or as an astronomer would say, a “perigee Moon.” The Moon’s orbit is an ellipse with one side (“perigee”) about 50,000 km closer than the other (“apogee”). Full Moons that occur on the perigee side of the Moon’s orbit are extra big and bright. This week’s Harvest Moon becomes full within 10 hours of perigee, making it about 5 percent bigger and 13 percent brighter than usual. Is that really “super”? You decide.

Before the days of electric lights, farmers relied on moonlight to harvest ripening autumn crops after sunset. The partial eclipse will briefly dim the glow. Pro tip for farmers: Take your headlamp.

Leave a Reply

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.