Scott McIntosh (@swmcintosh) 's Twitter Profile
Scott McIntosh

@swmcintosh

VP of Space Operations @lynkerspace - Space Weather - Hale Cycle - ExDepDir @NCAR_Science - ExDir @HAOSunEarthLab - @UofGlasgow BSc 95, PhD 98.

ID: 245476426

linkhttp://www.lynker-space.com calendar_today31-01-2011 19:50:15

11,11K Tweet

3,3K Followers

860 Following

Jorge รlvarez (@jal495588) 's Twitter Profile Photo

Una cara siempre reconocible... ๐Ÿฅน๐Ÿ˜Œ ยกEs ella! nuestra estrella madre. ๐Ÿ˜†๐Ÿ˜›๐Ÿฅฐ Nos estรก riรฑendo por algo, y dice que NO ๐Ÿง

Halo CME (@halocme) 's Twitter Profile Photo

Interesting. SDO/HMI B_LOS data indicate the magnetic field in Sun's north pole (latitude>70ยฐ, middle panel) fully reversed late in 2024. In the declining phase of a solar cycle, we may expect scary regions like AR 12673 (Sep 2017), and an elevated frequency of stealth CMEs.

Interesting. SDO/HMI B_LOS data indicate the magnetic field in Sun's north pole (latitude>70ยฐ, middle panel) fully reversed late in 2024.

In the declining phase of a solar cycle, we may expect scary regions like AR 12673 (Sep 2017), and an elevated frequency of stealth CMEs.
Dr. Tamitha Skov (@tamithaskov) 's Twitter Profile Photo

A new big flare player enters! New Region (likely to be numbered 4137 or 4138) fires a near M2.5-flare & launches a non-Earth-directed #solarstorm. The risk for R1-level #RadioBlackouts increases now. We'll know more once it rotates fully into Earth-view over the next few days.

Watts Up With That (@wattsupwiththat) 's Twitter Profile Photo

๐—–๐—น๐—ถ๐—บ๐—ฎ๐˜๐—ฒ ๐—ข๐˜€๐—ฐ๐—ถ๐—น๐—น๐—ฎ๐˜๐—ถ๐—ผ๐—ป๐˜€ ๐Ÿด: ๐—ง๐—ต๐—ฒ ๐—ก๐—ฃ๐—œ ๐—ฎ๐—ป๐—ฑ ๐—ฃ๐——๐—ข The North Pacific Index (NPI) and Pacific Decadal Oscillation (PDO) are crucial climate oscillators in the Pacific, tracking sea level pressure and sea surface temperatures (SSTs) over multidecadal scales.

๐—–๐—น๐—ถ๐—บ๐—ฎ๐˜๐—ฒ ๐—ข๐˜€๐—ฐ๐—ถ๐—น๐—น๐—ฎ๐˜๐—ถ๐—ผ๐—ป๐˜€ ๐Ÿด: ๐—ง๐—ต๐—ฒ ๐—ก๐—ฃ๐—œ ๐—ฎ๐—ป๐—ฑ ๐—ฃ๐——๐—ข
The North Pacific Index (NPI) and Pacific Decadal Oscillation (PDO) are crucial climate oscillators in the Pacific, tracking sea level pressure and sea surface temperatures (SSTs) over multidecadal scales.
Jure Atanackov (@jatanackov) 's Twitter Profile Photo

BOOM! On this day 25 years ago - July 14th, 2000, the Sun blasted an X8.2 flare directly towards us. It was big time eruptive, sending towards us a fast full-halo CME that would reach us the next day! It also rapidly produced a strong solar radiation storm peaking the next day at

Jure Atanackov (@jatanackov) 's Twitter Profile Photo

There is still time for more G5 storms in Solar Cycle 25. By this point in Solar Cycle 23 - 5 years, 6 months into the cycle - the 15-16 July 2000 Bastille Day G5 storm was still the only G5 of the cycle. The other two G5s, the 2003 Halloween storms, would happen 7 years, 2

There is still time for more G5 storms in Solar Cycle 25. By this point in Solar Cycle 23 - 5 years, 6 months into the cycle - the 15-16 July 2000 Bastille Day G5 storm was still the only G5 of the cycle. The other two G5s, the 2003 Halloween storms, would happen 7 years, 2
Jure Atanackov (@jatanackov) 's Twitter Profile Photo

The far side of the Sun is even busier! Numerous active regions and sunspots. Is this the beginning of the surge we have been waiting for? We will know soon.

The far side of the Sun is even busier! Numerous active regions and sunspots. Is this the beginning of the surge we have been waiting for? We will know soon.
Jure Atanackov (@jatanackov) 's Twitter Profile Photo

What a difference just 2 weeks make! Here is a time lapse of the full solar disk, showing the increase in the number of active regions and sunspots in the last 14 days. From SN ~70 to 200+. Hopefully the surge continues!

Jure Atanackov (@jatanackov) 's Twitter Profile Photo

The busy far side of the Sun today. Counting about 13 active regions with sunspots (maybe a few more)! The sunspot number would most likely be 200+. Looks like the surge will continue for at least a couple of weeks.

The busy far side of the Sun today. Counting about 13 active regions with sunspots (maybe a few more)! The sunspot number would most likely be 200+. Looks like the surge will continue for at least a couple of weeks.
NOAA Space Weather Prediction Center (@nwsswpc) 's Twitter Profile Photo

NOAAโ€™s SWFO-L1 spacecraft has arrived in Florida to begin launch preparations. Set to launch with NASAโ€™s IMAP mission no earlier than Sep., SWFO-L1 will journey a million miles to L1 to deliver real-time observations of the Sun and solar wind to SWPC.

NOAAโ€™s SWFO-L1 spacecraft has arrived in Florida to begin launch preparations. Set to launch with NASAโ€™s IMAP mission no earlier than Sep., SWFO-L1 will journey a million miles to L1 to deliver real-time observations of the Sun and solar wind to SWPC.
Jure Atanackov (@jatanackov) 's Twitter Profile Photo

The Sun is looking increasingly busy as numerous active regions rotate from the backside into view. The sunspot number has rebounded as is at 142 today. It will likely rise further as more active regions come into view. With one week until the end of July the average sunspot

The Sun is looking increasingly busy as numerous active regions rotate from the backside into view. The sunspot number has rebounded as is at 142 today. It will likely rise further as more active regions come into view. With one week until the end of July the average sunspot
Terry Griffin (@spaceplowboy) 's Twitter Profile Photo

K-State agricultural economist appointed to Space Weather Advisory Group to White House Honored to be representing the end users of GPS including construction, mining, drilling, and of course agriculture #precisionag #agtech #spacewx k-state.edu/news/articles/โ€ฆ

Nahel Belgherze (@wxnb_) 's Twitter Profile Photo

Watch the waves from yesterdayโ€™s M8.8 megathrust earthquake near Russiaโ€™s Kamchatka Peninsula roll across seismic stations in North America. Just amazing.

Jure Atanackov (@jatanackov) 's Twitter Profile Photo

Solar Cycle 25 update: July 2025 finishes with a monthly sunspot number 125.6, up from 116.3 in June. July was a pretty quiet month overall. 5 M-class flares, no X-class flares. The biggest was an M2.4 limb flare on July 8th.ย We did get 6 G1 storms, but most were short with just