New Flares of Activity Spotted on the Sun

New Flares of Activity Spotted on the Sun
Not huge, but new-cycle sunspot group 1007 emerged on Halloween and marched across the face of the sun over a four-day period in early November 2008. (Image credit: the Solar and Heliospheric Observatory (SOHO))

After more than two years of very low sunspot activity and hardly any flares, the sun is ramping up activity now.

The sun's activity ebbs and flows on a roughly 11-year cycle. It can range from very quiet to violent space storms that knock out power grids on Earth and disrupt radio and satellite communications. The last peak was in 2000, and scientists have in recent months figured the low point was occurring. Fresh sunspots during October suggest the corner has been turned.

"I think solar minimum is behind us," said David Hathaway of NASA's Marshall Space Flight Center in Huntsville, Ala. "Last month we counted five sunspot groups." he says.

"This represents a real increase in solar activity," Hathaway said in a statement today.

"We're still years away from solar maximum and, in the meantime, the sun is going to have some more quiet stretches," Hathaway said.

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