As the reporter for East Lyme, Old Lyme and Lyme, I cover the routine and the extraordinary aspects of small-town Connecticut life with the same level of care and attention to detail. This commitment is guided by the belief that the local level is where an informed citizenry can have the biggest impact. I enjoy telling the stories that make this area unique and asking the questions you need answered.
Elizabeth Regan
As the reporter for East Lyme, Old Lyme and Lyme, I cover the routine and the extraordinary aspects of small-town Connecticut life with the same level of care and attention to detail. This commitment is guided by the belief that the local level is where an informed citizenry can have the biggest impact. I enjoy telling the stories that make this area unique and asking the questions you need answered.
University-of-connecticut
Connecticut
United-states
Colby-college
Maine
Davidm-lahm
Davidj-tiffany
Phyllis-ross
Frederickb-gahagan
Jim-miller
Fred-harger
Alan-sheiness
Sat, 17 Jul 2021 06:42 UTC
On July 16, a powerful halo CME escaped from the farside of the sun the third such explosion in the last three days.
Imagine an explosion on the farside of the sun so powerful, we could feel it here on Earth, writes Dr Tony Philips over at spaceweather.com. Well, it just happened for the third time in as many days.
The debris emerged in a circular cloud known as a halo CME :
When space weather forecasters saw the
first explosion (from July 13/14), there was a moment of dread the ejection appeared to be heading
directly toward Earth; however, data from NASA s STEREO-A spacecraft indicated otherwise the CME was a farside event, and was, thankfully, travelling directly
Tony-philips
Twitter
Facebook
University-of-turku-finland
Relativistic-nuclei
Solar-cycle
Cosmic-rays
Grand-solar-minimum
Beaufort-gyre
Gulf-stream
டோனி-பிலிப்ஸ்
ட்விட்டர்