Solar flaring activity was low over the past 24 hours, with only C-class flares identified. The largest flare was a C4.4 flare (SIDC Flare 3284) peaking on January 16 at 07:26 UTC. There are currently 7 numbered active regions on the visible disk. SIDC Sunspot group 342 (NOAA AR 3959) and SIDC Sunspot Group 346 (NOAA Active Region 3961) are the most complex AR (beta-gamma-delta). The solar flaring activity is expected to be at moderate levels over the coming day with C-class flares expected and M-class flares probable and a chance of X-class flares.
No new Earth-directed Coronal Mass Ejections (CMEs) have been detected in the available coronagraph images.
The large east-west elongated negative polarity equatorial coronal hole (SIDC Coronal Hole 87) is still crossing the central meridian. A high-speed stream from this coronal hole may enhance the solar wind environment near Earth starting on Jan 16 and following days.
The greater than 10 MeV proton flux remained below the 10 pfu threshold and is expected to remain so over the next days.
The greater than 2 MeV electron flux remained below the 1000 pfu alert threshold, and is expected to remain below the threshold during the next 24 hours. The 24h electron fluence was at normal levels and is expected to remain so.