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UserRemoved1 08-03-2010 11:43 AM

Aurora
 
Heads up north tonite this one's a biggy and we may see aurora here tonight.

FOXNews.com - Solar Tsunami to Strike Earth

BigFish 08-03-2010 01:25 PM

I remember back in the day (7-8 years ago?) when the backside was good! I was fishing Ballston or Head of the Meadow and I could see the Northern Lights that night....it was truly a memorable sight! I will never forget it!:uhuh:

JohnR 08-03-2010 01:41 PM

I've seen it several times in fall on MV and down at SoCo, especially with a cool NW wind.

MrHunters 08-03-2010 02:09 PM

think ill head down to PI tonight. Thanks for the heads up!

Clammer 08-03-2010 02:10 PM

Larry ;

Back in the day .7 -8 years ago ;;


what the %$%$%$%$ are you thinking ?????????:confused::smash:

timmah 08-03-2010 02:28 PM

I hear massive coronal ionized particle ejections are good for fishin'.

PRBuzz 08-03-2010 03:48 PM

Supposedly there is an hour lead time from an earth orbiting satellite detecting the particles which will provide a clue as to whether the aurora will be better than average or stupendous.

HHH weather is not conductive to seeing aurora's light!

Nebe 08-03-2010 04:03 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by #^&#^&#^&#^&#^&#^&#^&#^&#^&#^&#^& (Post 785569)
Heads up north tonite this one's a biggy and we may see aurora here tonight.

FOXNews.com - Solar Tsunami to Strike Earth


so close you can almost smell uranus :rotf2:

Rob Rockcrawler 08-03-2010 04:05 PM

I saw an awesome display about 7-8 years ago while fishing the canal in october. Me and a buddy caught about 75 fish each, all 25-34 inches. It was also the day i was introduced to storm shads. Best day of fishing i had for many years, topped off with the lights.

Raven 08-03-2010 05:49 PM

been wondering how the corona discharge will effect the magnetosphere and fishin

i'll be out there at 3 am , sitting, waiting lookin North

PRBuzz 08-03-2010 07:13 PM

2 Attachment(s)
From Matt Noyes (NECN); aurora activity over last 2 hrs

UserRemoved1 08-03-2010 07:20 PM

pr buzz keep watching that. When you see the bright colors over our area then go look. Don't bother if it's just the blue/purple you won't see anything.

That is the chart to keep an eye on for polar activity.

nightfighter 08-03-2010 07:40 PM

So, what are expected to be the peak hours to see this????

UserRemoved1 08-03-2010 07:45 PM

btw the direct link for the polar images is here: Northern Hemisphere Enlarged View

This is only a c3 class flare which really isn't that big, they go C to M to X, with X being the most intense. The significance of this is that the flare was pointed directly at earth when it lit off. Usually they are pointed in other areas when they happen so they don't do much.

Now if we were to get a M or God forbid an X class flare pointed at us like this then I'd say get plenty of gas for your generators. You'll be needing them for a few months or a year.... If you think I'm kidding wait. I saw an X3 flare in the last solar cycle wipe out all shortwave stuff for almost a week. Snap crackle pop is all you hear. Those are electrical grid/satellite killers.

UserRemoved1 08-03-2010 07:47 PM

Ross from what I've been able to see it should start peaking in the next few hours and run to about 3-4 am so anytime. Key to seeing something is to watch that polar auroral plot from the satellite. That measures the density.

I just called my wife in New Brunswick and told her to send the kids outside later. Hopefully they'll get some pictures from up there.

nightfighter 08-03-2010 08:04 PM

Thanks, Scott. I love this stuff, whether it's the space station, or meteor showers. Perseids should be soon, no? Sure is a lot more comfortable now than watching those in January......

PRBuzz 08-03-2010 08:07 PM

Link to animation:

Animation of Recent Northern Polar Passes

UserRemoved1 08-03-2010 08:07 PM

Don't follow meteors Ross but I think they are. I only watch this because of my ham radio hobby. This solar cycle has started very very slow but it's ramping up very quickly.

Raven 08-03-2010 08:50 PM

too cloudy here in my neck of the woods
to see the stars

lotsa light pollution with yellow street lamps too :wall:

i'll check around 3-3:30 am

striperman36 08-03-2010 09:31 PM

Take off your sunglasses.

70 occluded here too

nightfighter 08-04-2010 03:27 AM

Clouded over here......

Raven 08-04-2010 03:52 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by striperman36 (Post 785795)
Take off your sunglasses.

can't do that.........my future's to bright :grins:

Rob Rockcrawler 08-04-2010 05:08 AM

I went out at 11 and looked up, didn't see anything. I couldn't look to the north.

piemma 08-04-2010 05:25 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by timmah (Post 785600)
I hear massive coronal ionized particle ejections are good for fishin'.

Well, about 7 or 8 years ago (Nebe will remember the night) I was fishing the incoming at 0 dark 30 at the Weakapaug Breachway. Nebe was about 10 miles away in Narragansett. There was an absolutely breathtaking Northern Lights display. Reds, greens, whites , light blues. Went on for a couple of hours. The fishing was wild. 1/2 hour after the Aurora started we started slamming big fish. 20 to 40 pound bass for about an hour.
I remember I spoke to Eben the next day and he commented on the display. I might be mistaken but I think this was one of the nights when he would take his life in his hands and crawl all the way to the end of the East Wall. I think he hooked and lost a moose right at the end of the Wall.

Raven 08-04-2010 06:58 AM

CURIOUS TO know
 
IF WHEN THE Sunrise in the east
IS DIRECTLY OPPOSITE........
on the other side of the EARTH
as.......
a Moon setting (IN THE WEST)
at the same time (approximately)
where both are simultaneously visible
............
if that has the same effect on the magnetosphere
as does a corona discharge....

BECAUSE IT HAS BEEN MY EXPERIENCE.......
that the fishing "TURNS ON" like unbelievable
for like 30-45 minutes

UserRemoved1 08-04-2010 07:41 AM

Coronal discharge is charged ions being hurled away from the sun. It hits our ionosphere and causes distortions in our magnetic field of the earth.

Picture a balloon being hit with a spray from a hose. Now imagine what happens to the balloon- it distorts and changes shape. That's about what it looks like if you could see it.

Got nothing to do with gravitational pull.

BigFish 08-04-2010 07:43 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by piemma (Post 785821)
Well, about 7 or 8 years ago (Nebe will remember the night) I was fishing the incoming at 0 dark 30 at the Weakapaug Breachway. Nebe was about 10 miles away in Narragansett. There was an absolutely breathtaking Northern Lights display. Reds, greens, whites , light blues. Went on for a couple of hours. The fishing was wild. 1/2 hour after the Aurora started we started slamming big fish. 20 to 40 pound bass for about an hour.
I remember I spoke to Eben the next day and he commented on the display. I might be mistaken but I think this was one of the nights when he would take his life in his hands and crawl all the way to the end of the East Wall. I think he hooked and lost a moose right at the end of the Wall.

Paul I am guessing that was the same time I saw it?? I believe it was Autumn??

DZ 08-04-2010 07:54 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by BigFish (Post 785897)
Paul I am guessing that was the same time I saw it?? I believe it was Autumn??

About that long ago I witnessed it on the cape the third week of September. A few years before that it was November out at Block.

Didn't see anything last night through the haze at 11.

DZ

Raven 08-04-2010 08:03 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by #^&#^&#^&#^&#^&#^&#^&#^&#^&#^&#^& (Post 785896)

Got nothing to do with gravitational pull.

~
Now Jean-Paul Mbelek and Marc Lachieze-Ray of the French Atomic Energy Commission near Paris say they can resolve the contradiction

that electromagnetism and gravity influence one another enough for gravity's pull to be noticeably affected by the Earth's magnetic field.


my main point was....not to get too astrally charged up on scientific theories...


is............ if you take the two charts...


sun rise times and moon set times


and you find a day where they are opposing each other
rising and setting at almost the same time
and go fishing during this time
you will be rewarded...:uhuh:


nuff said...


back ta werk

UserRemoved1 08-04-2010 08:38 AM

'SOLAR TSUNAMI': Northern Lights seen as far as Michigan after Sun's flare | Mail Online

checkout that picture. nice.


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