Sunday, April 19, 2026

GONG network status

As of 18 April: 

  • The Learmonth instrument is operational, and the sky is clear. 
  • The Udaipur instrument is operational, and the sky is clear. On April 19, the Camera Rotator stopped rotating. Local support team was requested to check if the Camera Rotator amplifier may have a blown fuse. The observations are taken, but the image orientation is not correct (see images below taken on 18 and 19 April). In early April, the internet connectivity at Udaipur experienced some instability. This was traced to a piece of cable chewed by the panther. This piece of cable was now replaced.
  • The El Teide instrument is operational, and the sky is mostly cloudy.
  • The Cerro Tololo instrument is operational, and the sky is clear.
  • The Big Bear instrument is operational, and the sky is partly cloudy.
  • The Mauna Loa instrument is down.
  • Two engineering sites in Boulder, Colorado (TC and TE) are down for testing.

     

Monday, April 13, 2026

Solar Activity Report: April 6 - 12, 2026

 Solar activity fluctuated from low to moderate and back to low levels during the week. Most flares were in the C‑class X‑ray range. The week began with only low‑level C‑class activity, followed by an increase to a C5.7 flare on April 7, a C8.9 flare on April 8, and an M1.0 flare on April 9. Activity then dropped sharply on April 10, with only B‑class X‑ray levels observed, and a single C1.9 flare on April 11. Conditions rose slightly on the final day of the week, producing several low C‑class flares, the strongest of which was C2.4. Overall, active region 14409 was the most productive region, generating 11 C‑class flares and one impulsive M‑class flare. No earth-directed CMEs were detected during this period.

Sunday, April 12, 2026

Yuri's Night and the International Day of Human Space Flight

Today is the 65th anniversary of first human space flight. On April 12, 1961, Soviet cosmonaut Yuri Gagarin orbited the Earth in the Vostok-1 spacecraft. Coincidentally, the first Space Shuttle mission was also launched on April 12, but in 1981, 20 years after the Gagarin's flight.

Space weather posed issues from the beginning of human space exploration resulting in failure of communication satellites due to radiation damage and electric discharges and loss of satellites due to enhanced atmospheric drag  (DOI: 10.1080/29979676.2024.2391688). GONG network provides critical observations for the operational space weather forecast issued by the NOAA's Space Weather Prediction Center (SWPC) and the prediction centers in other countries. 

Image shows a series of postage stamps issued in 2011 by the United Nations to commemorate 50 years of manned spaceflight. From left to right are the stamp depicting Yuri Gagarin's launch, an American astronaut on a ladder descending to the Moon's surface, the International Space Station, the Space Shuttle, and Soviet Soyuz spacecraft on its way to docking in orbit with the American Apollo spacecraft.

In 2011, the United Nations General Assembly designated April 12 as the International Day of Human flight. Yuri's Night is celebrated internationally since 2001.

Saturday, April 11, 2026

GONG/LE is back on-line

Internet connection to GONG station at Learmonth, Australia was restored, and the observations taken on previous days are now flowing to NISP data center. Attached images show example of magnetograms taken on 7-10 April 2026. Status of GONG network can be checked at the Network Monitor site and the data could be accessed via the main NISP data website.


 

Friday, April 10, 2026

Three Decades of Global Oscillation Network Group (GONG): From Helioseismology to Magnetic Field and Space Weather (Invited Review)

A review article on GONG has been published in Solar Physics. It offers a rich historical perspective on the network’s threedecade evolution, tracing its origins as a threeyear program focused on fulldisk helioseismic Doppler measurements to its current role as a major data source for spaceweather prediction. The article also outlines a forwardlooking discussion on the next major chapter: highlighting plans for the nextgeneration network, ngGONG.  

This article is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 International License, which permits free access while restricting commercial use and modifications.

DOI: 10.1007/s11207-026-02639-9


Thursday, April 9, 2026

GONG/ML Status

The temporary Mauna Loa Access Road was officially completed on March 26th. 

While the road is officially open, the official status of the Mauna Loa Observatory remains closed to the general public. Since the site will be an active construction zone for the next two years, NOAA staff will tightly schedule site access for mission-critical activities only to ensure personnel safety. All visitors require explicit authorization to access the site.

Regarding utilities, NOAA does not have a date for commercial power restoration, but is actively engaging with the local utility provider.

Contractors are now on site at MLO installing off-grid solar electric systems for NOAA and MLSO.

Photo: Ben Berkey, HAO/MLSO

 

GONG/LE Status

 Power has been restored to the GONG shelter, and observations are being taken. The GONG engineering & operations staff have been in contact with LSO staff, and are getting regular updates.

GONG Tool screenshot via WhatsApp (Detrick Branston & Brian Newcomb, 4/8/26).

 

 One of the two air conditioning units was damaged beyond repair. All of the control electronics soaked in water, fan cover and fan blades missing. A quote has been received for that work, and the replacement unit has been ordered.

A quote for the replacement of the shelter power disconnect enclosure and surge arrestor is pending. 

Email update 4/9/26: "Electricians have been at the observatory all this afternoon and most days this week testing and replacing water-affected electrical infrastructure in the RSTN (radio telescope) building through which all our comms passes. Once they clear that building for electrical power restoration, we can then turn our attention to the comms side. In addition to this issue (water through the RSTN building), we still have no fibre connection to the outside world. We are working with the BOM IT Support and the internet provider to try to diagnose and resolve this. It is possible that the fibre was damaged at the main road end, as a deep ditch was scoured out by the sea water and rain inundation (we couldn't even drive into the site). "

GONG data are stored on site. The workstation can retain up to 61 days of data. 

GONG network status

As of 18 April:  The Learmonth instrument is operational, and the sky is clear.  The Udaipur instrument is operational, and the sky is clear...