https://www.noaa.gov/stories/strong-...hrough-weekend
Anybody see northern lights or experience disruptions? Ham/comms guys? Satellite jockeys?
If you're unarmed, you are a victim.
https://www.noaa.gov/stories/strong-...hrough-weekend
Anybody see northern lights or experience disruptions? Ham/comms guys? Satellite jockeys?
If you're unarmed, you are a victim.
It didn't affect the launch yesterday from Florida. I'm sure there was a disturbance of some of our satellites orbiting deeper in space than LEO. The lead organization for this kind of research is based here in Colorado at UCAR.
https://scied.ucar.edu/learning-zone...-mass-ejection
https://www.space.com/spacex-starlink-launch-group-6-58
Per Ardua ad Astra
Per Ardua ad Astra
A disturbance in the force?
Even LEO satellites are affected. When the atmosphere gets hit with energy, it "swells" causing greater drag on LEO satellites, requiring them to boost more often.
The ISS took a [relative] dive, for instance: Mean height of ISS in km
O2
YOU are the first responder. Police, fire and medical are SECOND responders.
When seconds count, the police are mere minutes away...
Gun registration is gun confiscation in slow motion.
My feedback: https://www.ar-15.co/threads/53226-O2HeN2
San luis valley had no power Friday...
Snow storm related, no mention of geomagnetic. But thanks for playing.
https://alamosanews.com/article/vall...e-power-outage
If you're unarmed, you are a victim.
I noticed my GPS started to have accuracy/lock issues on Friday. It struggled a bit throughout the weekend, but that was the only issue I noticed from the solar storm.
Sent from my SM-S928U using Tapatalk
We saw quite a bit of SatComm loss.
Went exploring and saw the Northern Lights on Friday night.
20240511_010408 by ARNEWB, on Flickr
This was between Fort Collins and Ault, north of HWY14.
It wasn't this bright to the naked eye, but it was definitely visible. Not nearly as obvious as AK or Norway, but still really cool to see here in CO.