Solar flaring activity over the last 24 hours has been at moderate levels, with one M-class flare. The largest flare was an M1.0 flare (SIDC Flare 3572) peaking at 00:46 UTC on February 10, which was associated with SIDC Sunspot Group 391 (NOAA Active Region 3981, magnetic type beta-gamma). There are currently nine numbered active regions on the solar disk. The most complex ones are SIDC Sunspot Group 391 and 397 (NOAA Active Regions 3981 and 3988), both of magnetic type beta-gamma. SIDC Sunspot Groups 360 and 395 (NOAA ARs 3978 and 3984) have rotated behind the west limb. SIDC Sunspot Group 391 (NOAA AR 3981) is currently rotating behind the west limb but may still exhibit flaring activity. SIDC Sunspot Group 342 (NOAA AR 3989, magnetic type alpha) has rotated on disk from the east limb. A currently unnumbered region has rotated on disk from the east limb, in the south quadrant. The solar flaring activity is expected to be at low to moderate levels over the next 24 hours, with C-class flares expected and a chance for M-class flares.
A Coronal Mass Ejection (CME) was observed in LASCO/C2 coronagraph imagery around 11:30 UTC on February 10. It is estimated to be a backsided event and it is not expected to impact the Earth. A narrow CME was observed in LASCO/C2 coronagraph imagery around 00:15 UTC on February 10, associated with a prominence eruption near the east limb, in the northeast quadrant. It is not expected to impact the Earth. A faint CME was observed in LASCO/C2 coronagraph imagery around 01:30 UTC on February 10, most likely associated with the M1.0 flare (SIDC Flare 3572) peaking at 00:46 UTC on February 10 and a prominence eruption near SIDC Sunspot Group 391 (NOAA Active Region 3981). It is not expected to impact the Earth. No other Earth-directed CMEs were observed in the available coronagraph imagery.
The southern, low-latitude, negative-polarity coronal hole (SIDC Coronal Hole 87) is still crossing the central meridian. An associated high-speed stream may arrive at Earth starting from UTC midday on February 12.
The greater than 10 MeV proton flux was below the threshold level over the past 24 hours. It is expected to remain below the threshold level over the next 24 hours, pending no further eruptive activity.
The greater than 2 MeV electron flux was below the threshold level in the last 24 hours (with increased values measured by GOES 16 between 14:00 and 17:00 UTC on February 09) and it is expected to remain so over the next 24 hours. The 24-hour electron fluence is presently at normal levels and is expected to remain so over the next 24 hours.