2nd huge eruption from the sun hammers Venus

Earth’s sister planet Venus is experiencing a bout of extreme space weather this week after a giant sunspot, not visible from Earth, expelled an enormous plasma burst toward the scorching-hot planet.

On Monday (Sept. 5), NASA’s STEREO-A sun-watching spacecraft spotted a coronal mass ejection (CME), a cloud of charged particles erupting from the upper layer of the sun’s atmosphere, the corona, emerge from behind the sun, SpaceWeather.com (opens in new tab) reported.

The CME is the second to have hit Venus in a week; another one erupted from the sun on Wednesday (Aug. 30) and reached the planet three days later, just as the European Solar Orbiter spacecraft flew by.

Georgo Ho, a solar physicist at the Johns Hopkins University Applied Physics Laboratory, told SpaceWeather.com that the latest eruption was “no run-of-the-mill event.”

“I can safely say the Sept. 5th event is one of the largest (if not THE largest) Solar Energetic Particle (SEP) storms that we have seen so far since Solar Orbiter launched in 2020,” Ho, who is one of the lead investigators of the Energetic Particle Detector Instrument aboard Solar Orbiter, told SpaceWeather.com. “It is at least an order of magnitude stronger than the radiation storm from last week’s CME.”

The team operating the magnetometer instrument aboard the spacecraft, however, tweeted (opens in new tab) that the CME “appears to have largely missed” Solar Orbiter, although the spacecraft was affected by the energetic particles it delivered.

“There was … a very large number of energetic particles from this event and [the magnetometer] experienced 19 ‘single event upsets’ in its memory yesterday,” the magnetometer team said in the tweet. “[The Solar Orbiter magnetometer] is robust to radiation: it automatically corrected the data as designed and operated nominally throughout.”

Ho added that the energetic intensity of the charged particles around the spacecraft “has not subsided since the beginning of the storm.”

“This is indicative of a very fast and powerful interplanetary shock, and the inner heliosphere may be filled with these high-energy particles for a long time. I think I’ve only seen a couple of these in the last couple solar cycles,” Ho told SpaceWeather.com (opens in new tab). (The heliosphere is the huge bubble of charged particles and magnetic fields that the sun blows around itself.)

The source of the powerful eruption is believed to be the sunspot region AR3088, which crossed the Earth-facing side of the sun’s disk in August and has likely grown into a much more powerful beast since disappearing from Earth’s view.

Due to the sun’s rotation, the sunspot will face our planet again next week, SpaceWeather.com said, which means Earth, too, may be up for some space weather activity soon.

Solar Orbiter was built to measure such events, so scientists can hardly complain about the battering. As Ho told SpaceWeather.com, “many science papers will be studying this [event] for years to come.”

See more here space.com

Header image: NASA / STEREO

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Comments (6)

  • Avatar

    davejr

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    Just an observation. During this time period Venus is on one side of the sun while all the other planets are on the other side. It would be interesting to know if this has any bearing on the direction or intensity of CMEs.
    http://www.faustweb.net/solaris/

    Reply

  • Avatar

    Jerry Krause

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    Hi PSI Readers,

    This article and the comments of Carbon Bigfoot and Davejr is about what PSI was intended to be..

    My comment is to call your attentions to the historical fact that I believe human’s have long observed comet tails which are evidences of the SOLAR WIND. Hence we should know that our SOLAR SYSTEM has an atmosphere which originates at the SUN and becomes less dense of the edges of the solar system; just as the earth’s atmosphere becomes less dense with increasing altitude

    Have a good day, Jerry

    Reply

  • Avatar

    Jerry Krause

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    Hi PSI Readers,

    Soon after I posted my previous comment, I had another thought. But I cannot connect this comment with the previous because the previous is Awaiting Moderation.

    However, to focus your attention on a generally understood idea, I ask: What is the cause of the observed solar flares.

    Have a good day, Jerry

    Reply

  • Avatar

    nohomehere

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    my money is on solar flare , today had big unforcasted cme. flash news
    https://spaceweather.com
    POSSIBLE INTERPLANETARY SHOCK WAVE: This was not in the forecast. An interplanetary shock wave struck Earth on Sept. 14th at 2313 UT. Magnetometers in Boulder, CO, registered a sudden impulse of 30 nanoTeslas. This may be a previously unrecognized CME embedded in the solar wind. Minor G1-class geomagnetic storms are possible in the hours ahead as Earth’s magnetic field reverberates from the impact. Solar flare alerts: SMS Text.

    Reply

  • Avatar

    Jerry Krause

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    Hi NoHome,

    Thank you for calling our attention to your link. It amazes me how much is now being observed about which I had no idea. However, I have previously asked the question “What is the cause of the observed solar flares.” to which no one has yet replied. And I believe the answer is related so a shockwave occurring in SUN which results in more solar flares.

    As well as being a Scientist, I now claim to be a Teacher, because I believe many PSI readers know of the ancient teacher, Socrates, who only asked his students questions which he expected his students to answer. And if you know this, you know what happened to Socrates.

    However, I did not learn to see THE OBVIOUS until I read the book, ‘Louis Agassiz As A Teacher’ (1917) as edited by Lane Cooper, a professor of the English language at Cornell University. For in this book I read about what two of Agassiz’s students (a Professor Shaler and a Professor Scudder) wrote about their experiences of Agassiz’s first assignments for them.

    Have a good day, Jerry

    Reply

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