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Extraño comportamiento del Sol deja desorientados a los científicos

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Según lo pronosticado por los científicos, actualmente debemos estar en el pico del ciclo solar de 11 años, el llamado ‘máximo solar’. Este período se caracteriza por el aumento de las manchas en la superficie del Sol y, en consecuencia, el aumento de eyecciones solares.
Sin embargo, las últimas observaciones de los científicos han mostrado que la estrella ha estado tranquila y casi no había manchas.
“No estamos teniendo mucho de este máximo solar”, indicó Dean Pesnell, científico del Observatorio de Dinámica Solar de la NASA.
Según destaca el periódico, para los investigadores que tratan de entender la dinámica en el interior del Sol, esta ha sido una demostración de lo mucho que aún no sabemos.
“Ha sido desde cualquier punto que se mire un ciclo bastante tranquilo, y creo que no debemos esperar que la segunda mitad sea diferente”, dijo a su vez Robert Rutledge, de la oficina del Centro de Predicción del Clima Espacial de la Administración Nacional Oceánica y Atmosférica de EE.UU. (NOAA).
Admitió que nuestra comprensión de cómo funciona el Sol todavía está incompleta y “francamente, no somos muy buenos en las predicciones del ciclo solar”.
De acuerdo con Rutledge, el Sol podría permanecer ‘en silencio’ o mostrar un aumento de actividad, e incluso hay la posibilidad de un clima espacial extremo, que podría llegar en cualquier momento.




This is the height of the 11-year solar cycle, the so-called solar maximum. The face of the Sun should be pockmarked with sunspots, and cataclysmic explosions of X-rays and particles should be whizzing off every which way.

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Instead, the Sun has been tranquil, almost spotless.
As W. Dean Pesnell, the project scientist for NASA’s Solar Dynamics Observatory, dryly noted, “We’re not having much of a solar maximum.”
A week ago, a solitary sunspot blemished an otherwise blank yellow disk. In the ensuing days, a few more specks appeared, but even a small explosion, or coronal mass ejection, last Thursday seemed like the halfhearted effort of a slacker star.
“The truth of it is there isn’t a lot going on,” said Joseph M. Kunches, a space scientist at the Space Weather Prediction Center. “It’s been a bit of a dud. You look at the Sun today and you say, ‘What?’ ”
For those who depend on Dr. Kunches’s work, like satellite operators and power companies, that is actually good news. One of the worries in our highly technological 21st-century civilization is that a direct hit on Earth by a gargantuan solar storm could disable satellites and overwhelm wide swaths of power grids. A quiet Sun makes that much less likely.
For scientists trying to understand the dynamics in the interior of the Sun, it has been a humbling experience enlightening them about how much they do not know. “If there’s anyone who has figured it out, I haven’t heard, that’s for sure,” said Douglas Biesecker, a physicist at the Space Weather Prediction Center and the chairman of a panel that had issued predictions about the solar cycle.
They do have a basic understanding. Inside the Sun, flows of electrons and protons generate magnetic fields that undulate on roughly an 11-year schedule. The roiling of the fields create regions that are cooler and darker — sunspots. The twisting magnetic fields within sunspots periodically snap, releasing enormous amounts of energy in solar flares and coronal mass ejections.
But some solar cycles are ferocious while others remain calm. Why the cycle is 11 years is another mystery.
This cycle, No. 24 since scientists started counting, has been befuddling from the start. Some expected an active cycle, similar to the ones of the recent past. Others predicted that this one would be quieter than usual; those predictions looked prescient as the lull of solar minimum stretched longer and deeper than expected. In 2008, the Sun was spotless on 266 days — the blankest in half a century. The following year, when the percolating of sunspots should have picked up, the Sun was blank for 260 days.
Solar activity picked up in 2010 and especially 2011. Then the number of sunspots started dropping again. That was not necessarily surprising. In some previous cycles the Sun’s northern hemisphere became active first, and scientists expected a second peak in sunspots as the southern hemisphere entered its active period.
The southern hemisphere indeed began to perk up, but then leveled off and has remained that way for the past year, leading to more head-scratching. “In all honesty, it really feels like the Sun can’t make up its mind,” Dr. Biesecker said. “It’s just this flat mesa, and it’s not budging.”
If there is no second peak, and solar maximum actually occurred two years ago, then Solar Cycle 24 would be extremely odd — late to start and early to end. “What would surprise me is if it didn’t pick up over the next year,” Dr. Pesnell said.
How far back do have scientists have to look back to find a solar maximum quite as weak? As far back as Chicago Cubs fans do for a World Series championship.
Cycle 14 in the early 1900s was similarly quiet. (The Cubs won the 1908 World Series, about a year after the maximum of that solar cycle.) This time, solar scientists have Sun-watching satellites providing reams of data for them to analyze. “For the first time, we’ll be looking at a solar cycle that’s really different from the ones we’ve seen before,” Dr. Pesnell said.
Dr. Pesnell says it has already become apparent that the flow patterns within the Sun are more complicated than had been supposed.
Despite the minimal sunspots, the Sun is still going through the rest of its cycle as usual. Its magnetic field is on the cusp of flipping, as expected. At solar maximum, the magnetic fields at the poles essentially disappear for a brief time, and when they re-emerge, they are pointing in the opposite direction. If you had a compass on the Sun’s north pole and it were pointing north before solar maximum, it would be pointing south after solar maximum. (Actually, the compass would vaporize.) The north pole has already flipped; the south pole is behind but last month scientists at Stanford’s Wilcox Solar Observatory said they expected the transition to be complete soon.
“We do see indications that solar maximum is about now,” Dr. Pesnell said.

http://www.nytimes.com/2013/09/24/s...=1&adxnnlx=1381861599-bIkK4IrhO5GNBlOqayebvA&


De hecho yo mismo estaba seguro que nuestra estrella nos iba a dar un espectáculo grandioso y muestra de gran poder, provocando-nos una serie de problemas asociados a una mega tormenta.

aunque todo puede ser, somos tan ignorantes aun de nuestro entorno y como dice un refrán popular "la calma precede a la tempestad"
 
la naturaleza es impredecible, siempre hay estimaciones y huea pero al final la verdad puede ser un poco diferente.
 
el son esta acumulando su energía haciendo una henkidama para lazarla el 2014
 
Esto no es extraño, son ciclos, por lo tanto son estudiados y se han visto anteriormente...
El campo magnético del sol se 'voltea' cada cierto numero de años.... nada extraño...
 
todas las predicciones indicaban un máximo solar muy violento para 2012-2013
Pero predicciones de Salfate no cuentan, los cientificas solo auguraban un maximo solar y CMEs violentas dentro de los conocido en estos maximos.
 
Esto no es extraño, son ciclos, por lo tanto son estudiados y se han visto anteriormente...
El campo magnético del sol se 'voltea' cada cierto numero de años.... nada extraño...


no seas weon, o te haces, el tema es tan importante que la academia de ciencias de EEUU saco un informe muy detallado de lo que ellos esperaban y eso fue hace 3 o 4 años
 
no seas weon, o te haces, el tema es tan importante que la academia de ciencias de EEUU saco un informe muy detallado de lo que ellos esperaban y eso fue hace 3 o 4 años


Era trolleo hermano, pero me interesa saber más....
 
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