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Subject:
From:
Edward Herrick-Gleason <[log in to unmask]>
Reply To:
Edward Herrick-Gleason <[log in to unmask]>
Date:
Thu, 31 Mar 2022 12:00:00 -0400
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THE SOUTHWORTH PLANETARIUM
70 Falmouth Street      Portland, Maine 04103
(207) 780-4249      usm.maine.edu/planet
43.6667° N    70.2667° W  Altitude:  10 feet below sea level Founded
January 1970
2021-2022: CI
“My grandpa started walking five miles a day when he was 60. Now he’s 97
years old and we have no clue where he is.”  -Anonymous

THE DAILY ASTRONOMER
Thursday, March 31, 2022
Cannibal CME

The question prompted by today's DA might be, "Does everything in the
Universe need a name?!" Heavens above, we have the "galbella" the space
between the eyebrows. "gralix," the mish-mash ensemble of %$^$%&@!! that
cartoonists put in place of the profanity they actually want to write,
"antepenultimate," referring to anything just preceding the penultimate,
which, itself, is defined as the second to last of anything,
"Ornithoscelidaphobia," which, as you might have already guessed, is the
irrational fear of dinosaurs, and, of course, "the pathological propensity
for periphrasis and circumlocution," in reference to those undisciplined
writers inclined toward superfluous verbiage -the word "verbiage" would
have been sufficient- and intolerably long run-on sentences, something
we're proud to assert does not afflict these well-honed and concisely
crafted astronomical articles.

So, yes, perhaps everything in the Universe needs a name.

And that brings us neatly to "cannibal CMEs," or "cannibal Coronal Mass
Ejections." A Coronal Mass Ejection refers to a cloud of charged particles
erupting off the Sun. They tend to travel through space at millions of
miles per hour and will often assault our planet's magnetic field a couple
of days after their ejection. Although CME's tend to produce gorgeous
auroral displays over a wide area, they could also disrupt the
satellite-dependent communication systems.

So, what is a cannibal CME?
To explain, let's imagine two CME's in succession. The first one leaves the
Sun and prepares to wreak havoc on the worlds in the inner solar system.
Soon thereafter another, more powerful CME, is ejected. Provided it is
traveling in the same direction as the CME which preceded it, this second
CME will overtake, or devour, the first, resulting in a larger, potentially
more dangerous CME. The combined CMEs form a cannibal CME.

One of them is striking our world right now. Last night, in fact,
enchantingly beautiful aurora displays were visible in North Dakota. Regard
the following image taken from www.spaceweather.com

[image: dakota_strip.jpg]

While I am tempted to encourage you to venture outside tonight to see the
aurora borealis, I will decline.  First,the skies are predicted to be
overcast throughout the whole accursed night.  Secondly, aurora predictions
are always dodgy.   Case in point, the Aurora Alert posted on March 14th.
Despite the hype and hoopla, nothing materialized.  The aurorae remained
confined to those remote regions of the upper hinterlands where one can
still hear the midnight lamentations of  hungry wolves and forlorn
wraiths.

However, be well assured that Earth is presently shrugging away the charged
particles of a powerful cannibal CME. Though we might miss the resultant
northern lights this time, eventually other cannibal CME's will arrive.
Provided the skies are clear, perhaps we'll then behold the celestial
spectacle of an aurora.



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