Solar flaring activity was high over the past 24 hours, with one X-class flare and three M-class flares. The strongest flare was an X1.1 flare (SIDC Flare 6337) peaking at 05:01 UTC on December 8, which was associated with SIDC Sunspot Group 713 (NOAA Active Region 4298, magnetic type beta). There are currently eight numbered active regions on the solar disk. The most complex one is SIDC Sunspot Group 709 (NOAA Active Region 4294) with magnetic type beta-gamma-delta. SIDC Sunspot Group 718 (magnetic type beta-gamma) has emerged in the north hemisphere, east of SIDC Sunspot Group 687 (NOAA Active Region 4299, magnetic type beta-delta). The solar flaring activity is expected to be moderate over the next 24 hours, with M-class flares very likely and a small chance for X-class flares.
A wide Coronal Mass Ejection (SIDC CME 606), was observed in LASCO/C2 and C3 coronagraph imagery starting from around 05:20 UTC on December 08, lifting off the west limb. It is most likely associated with the X1.1 flare (SIDC Flare 6337) that peaked at 05:01 UTC on December 8. Preliminary analysis indicates that it will not impact Earth. Further analysis is ongoing. No other Earth-directed CMEs were observed in the available coronagraph imagery.
Over the past 24 hours the greater than 10 MeV GOES proton flux was enhanced but remained below the 10 pfu threshold. The 10 MeV GOES proton flux is expected to remain so over the next days, with chances for further enhancements.
During the last 24 hours, the greater than 2 MeV electron flux measured by GOES 19 was above the 1000 pfu threshold until 19:00 UTC on December 07. The greater than 2 MeV electron flux measured by GOES 18 was above the 1000 pfu threshold until 02:00 UTC on December 08. The 24-hour electron fluence was at moderate levels and is expected to gradually return to normal levels over the next 24 hours.