| The link between a CACTus and a CME | |
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CACTus is not a plant, it's a software tool 'Computer Aided CME Tracking' developed by the SIDC to autonomously detect CME's in a series of pictures taken by LASCO, the coronograph onboard of SOHO. On May 10, CACTus detected a partial halo CME. There is only a small chance that the glancing blow in two of three days affects the earth magnetic field. |
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| Nederlandstalige versie / Version française | posted: May 12, 2004 |
In the first ring the closest to the Sun with the mark of May 10, a white band ranges from beneath to almost the whole right side. This line is a pictorial representation of the CME. The May 7th halo CME is still visible on the image. A shock was seen in the ACE-data and SOHO/CELIAS measurements on May 10 as a jump in the graphs of different physical quantities versus time. A shock could be a signature of a possible arrival of a CME on earth. With the May 7th CME in our minds, we expect the May 10th CME not be geoeffective. |
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![]() Click on the LASCO image to see a movie of the CME. It appears in the C3 field on 06:42 UT in the south-west corner. |
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