Strong solar flare making its way towards Earth

The storm is moving medium fast, about 2.5 million mph (4.02 million kph), meaning the soonest it could arrive is early Friday

September 11, 2014 08:07 am | Updated 11:48 pm IST - WASHINGTON

This Jan. 22, 2012 file picture shows a solar flare erupting on the Sun's northeastern hemisphere. A solar storm moving at a speed of 2.5 million mph could arrive  early Friday, scientists from the Weather Prediction Centre in Boulder, Colorado have predicted.

This Jan. 22, 2012 file picture shows a solar flare erupting on the Sun's northeastern hemisphere. A solar storm moving at a speed of 2.5 million mph could arrive early Friday, scientists from the Weather Prediction Centre in Boulder, Colorado have predicted.

A strong solar flare is blasting its way to Earth, but the worst of its power looks like it will barely skim above the planet and not cause many problems.

It has been several years since Earth has had a solar storm of this size coming from sunspots smack in the middle of the sun, said Tom Berger, director of the Space Weather Prediction Centre in Boulder, Colorado, U.S.. The flare on the sun barely hits the “extreme” on forecasters’ scale, but with its worst effects missing Earth it is only looking “potentially strong” at most when it arrives at Earth as a solar storm, he said.

So while the power grid may see fluctuations because the storm will cause changes in Earth’s magnetic field, it won’t knock power systems off line, Mr. Berger said. It may cause slight disturbances in satellites and radio transmissions but nothing major.

The storm is moving medium fast, about 2.5 million mph (4.02 million km/hr), meaning the soonest it could arrive is early Friday. But it could be later, Mr. Berger said.

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