105 degrees in downtown San Francisco today, and hotter still tomorrow.

     "The sun is still approaching the PEAK of its 11-year cycle, thought due
sometime this year.  [When it arrives, that peak is expected to be the
largest in CENTURIES.]
     "Unlike previous cycles, this period has been relatively quiet, with
eruptions only every two months or so.  But finally, the sun is beginning to
flex its muscles ...
     "This storm is about 20 times stronger than a solar flare in early
April."


Major Solar Storm Detected

By JOSEPH B. VERRENGIA
.c The Associated Press

BOULDER, Colo.(AP), June 7 - Scientists have detected a major solar flare
erupting on the sun that could buffet Earth with a geomagnetic storm in the
next two days.

The blast of charged solar particles already is producing scattered radio
blackouts but is not expected to significantly disrupt telecommunications or
electrical power. It might generate a dramatic light show for midnight
stargazers in the northern latitudes until early Saturday.

The sun is approaching the height of its 11-year storm cycle. Unlike previous
cycles, this period has been relatively quiet, with eruptions every two
months or so.

This storm is estimated to be 20 times stronger than a solar flare in early
April.

``Finally, the sun is beginning to flex its muscles,'' said solar forecaster
Dave Speich of the federal Space Environment Center in Boulder.

The latest eruption came at midday Tuesday from a cluster of sunspots on the
upper left of the sun as viewed from Earth. A powerful X-ray flare ejected an
estimated billion tons of charged particles into space.

Riding the solar wind at speeds up to 2 million mph, the particles should zap
Earth's magnetic field late Thursday or early Friday. The sunspot cluster
could be active another eight days.

Solar flares can create electrical disturbances that disrupt power supplies,
telecommunications and signals that control pipelines and other systems. The
particles can damage satellites and alter their orbits.

The storm is rated as moderate on the federal government's new space weather
scale.

In 1989, a severe solar storm knocked out power stations serving Canada and
the northeastern states, as well as an electrical transformer in New Jersey.
Since then, power grid and satellite operators have taken steps to protect
their systems.

The clouds of charged particles also produce the aurora borealis, or northern
lights. Weather permitting, the light show from this storm could be visible
as far south as Washington, D.C.


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