Earth & Space Weather

More than 30 Dead in China Flooding (video)

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Weather.com- 7/12/13, Associated Press

BEIJING  -- Floodwaters surging through Himalayan foothills in western China have swept bridges, houses and hillsides into roiling brown rivers, leaving at least 31 people dead and 166 missing Thursday, as heavy rains buffet many parts of the country.

Flooding in the western province of Sichuan was the worst in 50 years for some areas, with more than 220,000 people forced to evacuate

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Where it rains glass - Hubble finds a bizarre blue exoplanet

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The Watchers, 7/12/13, Adonai

Astronomers at NASA's Hubble Space Telescope have, for the first time, identified a true color of planed out of our Solar System. The planet is 63 light-years away and is boringly named HD 189733b but it is rather interesting, bizarre and exotic. It is also the closest exoplanet that can be seen crossing the face of its star.  

It has been intensively studied by Hubble and other telescopes, and its atmosphere has been found to be dramatically changeable and exotic, with hazes and violent flares.

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Dramatic Changes in Coastal Water Temperatures over the Past 30 Years

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Accuweather.com, 7/11/13,

New research from Stony Brook University (NY) shows that changes in coastal ocean Temperatures may be much more extreme than what global averages indicate.

 

The research team, led by Dr. Hannes Baumann, mapped the differences in how the world's coastlines are experiencing climate change over the past 30 years.

The researchers found that the coastal waters in the North Pacific and North Atlantic Oceans have warmed three times higher than the global average.

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NASA’s IBEX Provides First View Of the Solar System’s Tail

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Nasa, 7/11/13

It has long been assumed that our solar system, like a comet, has a tail. Just as any object moving through another medium – for example, a meteor traveling through Earth’s atmosphere – causes the particles to form a stream trailing off behind it. But the tail of our solar bubble, called the heliosphere, has never actually been observed, until now.

NASA’s Interstellar Boundary Explorer, or IBEX, has mapped the boundaries of the tail of the heliosphere, something that has never before been possible. Scientists describe this tail, called the heliotail, in detail in a paper published on July 10, 2013, in The Astrophysical Journal. By combining observations from the first three years of IBEX imagery, the team mapped out a tail that shows a combination of fast and slow moving particles. There are two lobes of slower particles on the sides, faster particles above and below, with the entire structure twisted, as it experiences the pushing and pulling of magnetic fields outside the solar system.

Volcanic activity worldwide 10 Jul 2013: Popocatépetl, White Island, Sakurajima, San Diego

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volcanodiscovery-July 10,2013

Sakurajima (Kyushu, Japan): Strong activity continues. This morning, a relatively large vulcanian-type explosion produced a plume rising to 14,000 ft (4.3 km) altitude. The the volcano continued to emit ash for several hours following the explosion.

White Island (New Zealand): GeoNet issued a new bulletin about unusual seismic activity at White Island, but mentions that there is no current eruption:
"Over the past few weeks White Island has repeatedly produced very small volcanic earthquakes. These small tremor bursts are occurring like clockwork, approximately every 70 seconds, creating a unique pattern on our earthquake drum, with hundreds of these small bursts recorded every day.

 

Space Weather Update~ WEAK IMPACT, NICE AURORAS, Wind Speed 445

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WEAK IMPACT, NICE AURORAS: A minor CME hit Earth's magnetic field on July 9th at approximately 20:30 UT. The impact was weak, and at first had little effect, but in the hours following the strike a geomagnetic storm developed. At its peak during the early hours of July 10th, the G1-class storm produced auroras in northern-tier US states from Wisconsin to Washington. Jim Reitz sends this picture from Rattlesnake Lake, about 30 miles east of Seattle:

The storm is subsiding now, but the aurora watch is not over. Solar wind conditions continue to favor Northern and Southern lights at high latitudes. NOAA forecasters estimate a 40% chance of polar geomagnetic storms on July 10th. Aurora alerts: text, voice.

Realtime Aurora Photo Gallery

SUNSPOT SUNSET: Despite its unstable magnetic field, big sunspot AR1785 has resisted exploding. Even so, it's putting on a good show. Pete Lawrence of Selsey UK photographed the active region as a dark-mark in the sunset on July 9th:

65: Japan’s Suwanose-jima volcano erupts in 1.5 km ash plume

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the extcinctionprotccol-June 10,2013

July 9, 2013JAPANVAAC Tokyo reported a small ash plume from the volcano at 5,000 ft (1.5 km) elevation today. Likely, some stronger strombolian-type explosion has occurred at the volcano, whose activity is similar to Stromboli in Italy. –Volcano Discovery

Read More:http://theextinctionprotocol.wordpress.com/2013/07/09/65-japans-suwanose-jima-volcano-erupts-in-1-5-km-ash-plume/

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