Saturday, December 6, 2025

It's

 

really not good...


Giant sunspot on par with the one that birthed 

the Carrington Event 

has appeared on the sun — and it's pointed right at Earth

Livescience 12/05/25


First of all for people who don't know 

what the Carrington event was:

"The Carrington Event was the most intense geomagnetic storm in recorded history, peaking on 1–2 September 1859 during solar cycle 10. It created strong auroral displays that were reported globally and caused sparking and even fires in telegraph stations. The geomagnetic storm was most likely the result of a coronal mass ejection (CME) from the Sun colliding with Earth's magnetosphere.

The geomagnetic storm was associated with a very bright solar flare on 1 September 1859. It was observed and recorded independently by British astronomers Richard Carrington and Richard Hodgson—the first records of a solar flare.

A geomagnetic storm of this magnitude occurring today has the potential to cause widespread electrical disruptions, blackouts, and damage to the electrical power grid."


(Obviously there are a lot more things that use electricity now than did in 1859 so a storm of this magnitude today would be much more problematic.


I asked honey very early on:


"How are they going to hide 

what 3I/ATLAS is doing

when it starts being obvious?"


Her response:

"The internet will go down.

Communications will be disrupted etc...")




"A gigantic cluster of sunspots — collectively around the same size as the one that birthed the largest solar storm in recorded history — has just emerged on the sun's Earth-facing side, and is now pointed directly at our planet. But don't panic!" 


(What good would it do you to panic anyway?)


"While auroras and some technological disturbances are possible over the coming week, the new sunspot complex seems unlikely to unleash a second Carrington Event."

(There is no reason listed here
for that conclusion to be drawn.

Fact is, we just don't know.)

"The complex, dubbed AR 4294-4296, is made up of two different sunspot groups, AR 4294, and AR 4296, that are magnetically intertwined. It first became visible on Nov. 28, when it rotated onto the sun's Earth-facing side on our home star's western limb. However, the dark patches were first spotted around a week earlier by NASA's Perseverance Mars rover, which was spying on the sun's far side relative to Earth."

(Why was it doing so?
I guess NASA had another serendipitous moment?
Like they did when Vera C Rubin observatory wasnt even operationalbut somehow managed to find 3I/ATLAS?)


"AR 4294-4296 is around the same size as a giant sunspot observed by British astronomer Richard Carrington in September 1859, which subsequently birthed the "Carrington Event" — the biggest solar storm ever seen by humans. The image above, first shared by Spaceweather.com on Dec. 2, shows the sunspot complex alongside Carrington's sketch of the giant 19th-century behemoth. At first glance, the new sunspot complex appears to be larger. However, in reality, its dark spots cover an area of the solar surface around 90% the size of the Carrington sunspot."

(Well that makes me feel a lot better,
it's only 90% of the size 
of the ones that launched the biggest
solar storm in history.

People have been warning 
that we are vulnerable to this type of event
for a long time.)


"Sunspots have the capacity to unleash powerful blasts of radiation, or solar flares, when their invisible magnetic field lines contort and snap, unleashing energy into space. These explosive outbursts can trigger temporary radio blackouts on Earth and launch massive, fast-moving clouds of plasma, or coronal mass ejections (CMEs), at our planet. When this happens, it can subsequently cause disturbances in our planet's magnetic field, known as geomagnetic storms, which can interfere with electronics and paint vibrant auroras in the night sky."

"The new dark patches are "one of the biggest sunspot groups of the past 10 years" 
and have the capacity to unleash supercharged X-class flares — the most powerful type on the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration’s solar flare categorization system — Spaceweather.com representatives recently wrote. If it does blow and unleashes a CME, then the resulting solar storm "will be geoeffective," they added."

("Geoeffective describes solar events, like Coronal Mass Ejections (CMEs) or high-speed streams, that are strong enough to cause significant disturbances in Earth's magnetosphere, leading to geomagnetic storms that can impact satellites, power grids, and communication systems, often identified by specific magnetic field orientations or densities from the Sun." 


"The Carrington Event unleashed an estimated X45 magnitude solar flare in 1859, which remains a record, although there is geological evidence that even more powerful blasts occurred long before humans emerged. For context, an X45 flare is more than five times stronger than the most powerful solar flare of the last decade — an X7 blast in October 2024."

"If an equally powerful blast impacted Earth today, the radiation would knock out every satellite in orbit around our planet, recent simulations revealed."

(Honey has been all over that possibility for a good while now.
This is yet another reason why an over-reliance on technology
was NEVER a good idea.

"Well when wont I have this?"

My son said when hating math in school
and raising up his phone.)


"It would also wreak havoc on the ground, potentially damaging parts of the electrical grid. Experts estimate that the total damages would easily exceed $1 trillion."

"If AR 4294-4296 is close in size to the sunspot that birthed the Carrington Event, that means a huge solar storm is likely, right? Well, yes and no."

"Larger sunspots do have the potential to launch more powerful solar flares. For example, the sunspot that birthed a geomagnetic "superstorm" in May 2024 was more than 15 times wider than Earth. However, with sunspots, size isn't everything."

"Whether or not a sunspot reaches its maximum explosive potential is also tied to the configuration of its magnetic field and the frequency with which it explodes, meaning that some giant sunspots can be completely harmless."

"The magnetic fields of AR 4294-4296 are quite entangled, meaning that flares are possible, and the complex has already unleashed a potential X-class flare while still on the sun's farside, according to Spaceweather.com. However, despite this, experts say there is no clear sign of a superstorm on par with the Carrington Event in the immediate future."

(Based on what?

And could we qualify:
"immediate future"
a lil bit more specifically
if you don't mind please?

Thx.

Look when it rains it pours.
So why would we be surprised 
if it happened?

Pray for the best,
but prepare 
(mentaly at least)
for the worst)

"Scientists will be keeping a particularly close eye on the magnetic field of the latest behemoth for signs of incoming activity. 
But if it happens to rotate past Earth without any outbursts, 
the hefty dark spots are likely large enough 
to survive more than one trip around the sun, 
meaning they could be back for "round two" 
sometime closer to Christmas.'

('Let us hope 3I/ATLAS will not deliver 
any unwanted gifts to Earth during the holiday season.'
Avi Loeb
Multiple times on his blog.

Combine that with:

"The European Space Agency (ESA)... activating its full planetary-defence triad. For three days, mission control, rapid-response modelling, and ground-based observational assets operated in a unified simulation. 

Japan followed suit with an accelerated asteroid-impact coordination drill that brought together civilian, military, and commercial satellite operators.
and

Within 48 hours, the U.S. Space Force completed a high-altitude orbital-tracking rehearsal—a drill originally scheduled for late 2026 but abruptly advanced to this autumn. Even nations that typically maintain a low profile in space operations—Australia, South Korea, Brazil—joined joint exercises designed to analyse 'high-velocity non-gravitationally accelerated objects'.


You can say whatever you want to about the source
but all of that above is true
and it's never happened before
and it all took place
right after the NASA "live event"
 that didn't tell you anything.

Might just wanna ask yourself
why all of  that would be.

Ever get  the feeling 
these people know more 
than they are letting on?

Cause I sure do
and its been
 from July 4th on 
with 3I/ATLAS.)


"The sun has been particularly active in recent years, because it has recently been in the most active phase of its roughly 11-year solar cycle, known as solar maximum."


"That has fueled several recent X-class flares, including two back-to-back explosions, which triggered a G4 (severe) geomagnetic storm between Nov. 11-12. 
In fact, 
2024 had the highest number 
of X-class flares in a single year 
since modern records began in 1996."

(I will shew wonders in the heavens
Joel 2:30.)

"A lot of these flares have triggered geomagnetic storms on Earth, including the extreme disturbance in May 2024, which was the most powerful of its kind for 21 years and triggered some of the most widespread auroras in centuries."




I reiterate:
 
"The Anunnaki
don't fucking control 
sun spot activity."


Monday, December 1, 2025


The master 
of the universe does.






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