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AR 3323


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Posted (edited)
1 hour ago, ChefyStephie said:

Disorganized, but starting to “get the gist”from the looks of it. Activity was down, but some decent growth from yesterday. Seems to be trending (slowly) into a beauty. 

It has lost Its complexity & the one delta that sparked the M4 flare the other day disappeared shortly after, as it looks right now, this region does not look promising.

Edited by mozy
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44 minutes ago, Patrick P.A. Geryl said:

Sorry… still growing.. polarity intermixing… I see it growing into a beta-gamma-delta in the next two days… 

Looks like spot number has doubled overnight, so that’s fun. 
 

(side note- it’s always fun to me when discussing growth and we say things like “small” or “only a little” because it’s often more than the entire *planet* I’m sitting on reading about it. Absolutely wild, honestly.)

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Spots and size down today. This spot perturbs me. It’s acting like an empty nest married couple who sleep in separate rooms now, but might still have a fight after a couple Long Island Iced Teas.*
 

*A very technical and scientific assessment.

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1 hour ago, ChefyStephie said:

Spots and size down today.

Yeah, not having a lot of hope for this one. 3327 seems more interesting for now, definitely a gamma, some hints of a delta; maybe someone will make a thread for it if it does anything interesting.

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3 minutes ago, Philalethes said:

Yeah, not having a lot of hope for this one. 

Probably for the best since any aurora watchers would have to contented with much more moon at present (and aggressive wildfire smoke in parts of North America). Fingers crossed for 3327!

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40 minutes ago, Andrey M said:

Hello, can we assume that CME 06/0312 UT and the long flare C2.9 on the central meridian 06/0320 UT are related to each other?

IMG_20230606_125102 (1).jpg

IMG_20230606_124406.jpg

That CME is related an eruption closer to the east-northeast limb.

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