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Space Weather Prediction Center

National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration

Saturday, January 21, 2017 07:48:52

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NOAA Scales mini

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Space Weather Conditions
24-Hour Observed Maximums
R
no data
S
no data
G
no data
Latest Observed
R
no data
S
no data
G
no data
R1-R2 --
R3-R5 --
S1 or greater --
G
no data
R1-R2 --
R3-R5 --
S1 or greater --
G
no data
R1-R2 --
R3-R5 --
S1 or greater --
G
no data
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R
no data
S
no data
G
no data
Current Space Weather Conditions
R1 (Minor) Radio Blackout Impacts
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HF Radio: Weak or minor degradation of HF radio communication on sunlit side, occasional loss of radio contact.
Navigation: Low-frequency navigation signals degraded for brief intervals.
More about the NOAA Space Weather Scales

GOES X-ray Flux

3 Day Plot GOES X-ray 3-day plot
6 Hour Plot GOES X-Ray 6-hour duration plot
Latest X-Ray Event (1-8Å)
Current
Beginning
Maximum
End

The GOES x-ray plots shown here are used to track solar activity and solar flares. Large solar x-ray flares can change the Earth’s ionosphere, which blocks high-frequency (HF) radio transmissions on the sunlit side of the Earth. Solar flares are also associated with Coronal Mass Ejections (CMEs) which can ultimately lead to geomagnetic storms. SWPC sends out space weather alerts at the M5 (5x10-5 Watts/mw) level. Some large flares are accompanied by strong radio bursts that may interfere with other radio frequencies and cause problems for satellite communication and radio navigation (GPS).

The latest event is the latest X-ray flare automatically detected by the GOES 15 or GOES 14 satellite, or manually entered if the detection algorithm fails, without regard to any earlier events. 

In other words, the "max" refers only to the maximum (peak) x-ray flux for the particular flare in question; so, even though an M-class event may have occurred earlier, it will be supplanted by the next flare detected, if the subsequent flare is only a C-class event.

The particulars for defining the begin, maximum, and end-time of an x-ray event are:

  • The begin time of an x-ray event is defined as the first minute, in a sequence of 4 minutes, of steep monotonic increase in 0.1-0.8 nm flux.
  • The x-ray event maximum is taken as the minute of the peak x-ray flux.
  • The end time is the time when the flux level decays to a point halfway between the maximum flux and the pre-flare background level.

Sometimes the algorithm will not trigger on a flare with a gradual rise-time (common for limb events), and the forecaster will have to enter the particulars manually.

The GOES X-ray flux 6-hour and three-day plots contain 1 and 5 minute averages, respectively, of solar X-rays in the 1-8 Angstrom (0.1-0.8 nm) and 0.5-4.0 Angstrom (0.05-0.4 nm) passbands. Data from the SWPC Primary GOES X-ray satellite is shown. Some data dropouts occur during satellite eclipses when the moon or Earth comes between the satellite and the sun, especially during the spring and fall. The Eclipse season lasts for about 45 to 60 days and ranges from minutes to just over an hour. The plots on this page update dynamically every minute.

GOES X-ray flux measurements (1 - 8 Angstrom flux) have been made since 1986 and, prior to that, on the NOAA SMS satellites since 1974. SWPC has used this data to produce the 1-minute and 5-minute averaged X-ray data sets and plots. For more information on the GOES satellites and their X-ray measurements see: GOES measurement data information

Current numerical data can be downloaded in ASCII text format.

A summary of GOES space weather data is available from the National Centers for Environmental Information (NCEI).

The GOES space weather archive can be accessed at NCEI.