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Aurora Alert! Solar Flare Heading Our Way

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An active sunspot (1123) erupted early this morning (Nov. 12th), producing a C4-class solar flare and apparently hurling a filament of material in the general direction of Earth. Coronagraph images from the Solar and Heliospheric Observatory (SOHO) and NASA’s twin STEREO spacecraft show a faint coronal mass ejection emerging from the blast site and heading off in a direction just south of the sun-Earth line. The cloud could deliver a glancing blow to Earth’s magnetic field sometime on Nov. 14th or 15th. High latitude sky watchers could see auroras on those dates.



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Aurora Alert! Solar Flare Heading Our Way | Universe Today
 
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LOL! dont worry, you will not die....

It would be an spectacular aurora event that might happen in the far north...so if u r in england or norther mainland europe, you will have have a chance to see this beautiful display of lights...

it is like any normal astro event like the eclipses, meteorid showers,etc....

:cheers:
 
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There was an interesting documentary that gave evidence that large asteroid strikes might be more common than we think.

We know a BIG one killed the dinosaurs. In North America, around 13,000 years ago, we had wooly mammoths, giant ground sloths, horses, camels, and a people called the Clovis people. They all disappeared in a blink, and they are finding the same tell-tale layer of cosmic metals at the 13,000 year point. They are even finding pieces of the metal in the tusks and horns of large animals.

It wasn't as big as the dinosaur rock, but the scary implication is that powerful ones still hit with some frequency, strong enough to kill a nation or even continent. 13,000 years ago is nothing in geologic time.
 
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NASA snaps closeup pics of comet Hartley 2

A closeup of the comet Hartley 2, photographed from 435 miles away, taken and released today by NASA. The comet's nucleus, or main body, is approximately 2 kilometers (1.2 miles) long and .4 kilometers (.25 miles) at the "neck," or most narrow portion. Jets can be seen streaming out of the nucleus.
hartley-2-d383561ff723df85.jpg


HUNTSVILLE, AL - Running a "bargain" mission under a program managed by Huntsville's Marshall Space Flight Center, scientists Thursday made only the fifth photographic fly-by of a comet.
Why should anyone on Earth care beyond a moment's "hmmm" reaction to the new and detailed images?

We should care, scientists say, because flights like these bring us closer to "the ultimate origins question."

"How did we get here? What material came to Earth 4.5 billion years ago that enable life to exist here?" asked mission principal investigator Dr. Michael A'hearn.

A'hearn is one of the astronomers looking for answers in comets, the icy solar bodies that orbit the Sun and form the core of Jupiter and other planets.

Scientists know comets bombarded the early Solar System, and some theorize they were the space taxis that brought the building blocks of life to Earth.

A'hearn's team got to take a close look at the comet Hartley 2 after engineers realized there was life left in a spacecraft that had already delivered the Deep Impact probe to its comet target in 2005.
Aiming the spacecraft at Hartley 2 cost NASA less than $50 million, engineers said, which basically meant NASA got two high-yield missions for the price of one. The fly-by mission is called EXPOXI, a smash-up of the names of the flight's main components.
At their briefing Thursday at NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory, scientists and engineers wore broad smiles and used words like "amazing" to describe what they had seen.

The black and white photographs showed a roughly 1.25-mile-long comet nucleus described variously as potato- or peanut-shaped. The comet was photographed from only 435 miles away after a journey by the spacecraft of 23 million miles.
Emitting from the nucleus were jets of dust fueled by carbon dioxide from dry ice within the core, scientists said.
"It's been an exciting day," Marshall Discovery program manager Dennon Clardy said from California.

Clardy said the Discovery program funds smaller space missions, often in collaboration with industry or educational institutions.
Clardy and mission manager Brian Key were in California for the fly-by and in the room when the first images returned.

"Every now and then we get a day like this," Key said. "It went off without a hitch. It has given us a lot of science and a great return on investment."

Also at JPL Thursday was Michael Hartley, the Australian astronomer who discovered the comet in 1986.
 
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