Sunday, June 28, 2026
The largest sunspot group of 2026
Tuesday, June 23, 2026
Solar Activity Report: June 15 - 21, 2026
Solar activity during the past week generally remained at low levels, except for the final two days when several M‑class flares were produced. Only low‑intensity C‑class flares were observed through June 19, after which activity increased with the arrival of active region 14473. The strongest event of the week was an isolated M6.8 flare on June 21 from AR 14473. This region also generated two additional moderate flares, an M1.0 on June 20 and an M2.6 on June 21. Active region 14472 produced another moderate flare, an M1.3, on June 20. June 16 was the least active day of the period, with X‑ray flux remaining mostly below the C level. Several coronal mass ejections were reported, though none had an Earth‑directed component.
Helioseismic mapping of the farside indicates a moderate‑sized
active region in the southern hemisphere that may rotate into Earth view around
June 24.
Monday, June 22, 2026
GONG weekly movies of solar activity
Wednesday, June 17, 2026
Solar Activity Report: June 8 - 14, 2026
Solar activity during the reporting period remained at low levels, with only C‑class flares observed. The strongest event was an impulsive C9.0 flare from active region 14465 on June 11. Additional C‑class activity from the same region included C7.2 and C4.5 flares on June 8, a C4.5 flare on June 9, a long‑duration C6.7 flare on June 11, and a C5.2 flare on June 12. Several low‑intensity C‑class flares were also produced by multiple active regions. As a result, active region 14465 was the most flare‑productive region of the period. A few CMEs were observed, but none contained a significant Earth‑directed component.
The latest helioseismic mapping of the Sun’s far hemisphere
indicates that a strong active region in the southern hemisphere may rotate
into Earth view around June 20 - 21, provided it maintain or increase the strength over the next few days. At present, the region exhibits helioseismic
signatures consistent with strong far‑side activity.
Update on recent conferences
This year, the American Geophysical Union (AGU) and Japan Geoscience Union (JpGU) organized a joint JpGU-AGU meeting in Tokyo, Japan. A special full-day session on "Frontiers in solar physics: observation, modeling, and long-term research from the past to the future" was organized by NSO personnel. Presentations for this session included breakthrough results from several missions (SDO, Hinode, Proba-3, Aditya-L1, Sunrise) and groundbased observatories including DKIST and Goode Solar Telescope, AI/ML, and numerical modeling.
June 10-11, 2026, NASA’s Extreme Precision Radial Velocity Research Coordination Network (EPRV RCN) group has organized on-line workshop to explore potential synergies in data/facilities/analysis methods between the EPRV and the solar physics communities with a focus on understanding the solar phenomena that cause spectral line-shape deformations and spurious RV signals. See the event web page at: https://eprv-rcn.github.io/events/eprv-solar-workshop/. Serena Criscuoli gave invited presentation on "Overview of DKIST" and Alexei Pevtsov reported on "Next generation Ground based solar Observing Network (ngGONG)".
NSO was represented at the Space Climate 10 Symposium by two oral presentations, one poster, and as co-authors in one invited talk (https://indico.global/event/17578/contributions/). GONG and SOLIS data were mentioned by several presenters. Attached image shows presentation by Dr. Theodosios Chatzistergos, who used GONG (broadband/white light) data for reconstructing the total solar irradiance.
Tuesday, June 16, 2026
Update on GONG window function
Thursday, June 11, 2026
GONG Farside Helioseismic Mapping Project: Release of Upgraded Data Products
NISP has released an upgraded version of the data products generated by the improved farside helioseismic mapping pipeline (GONG Farside Maps), which utilizes full disk GONG Dopplergrams This upgradation incorporates substantial improvement to the pipeline, addressing long standing issues and implementing new strategies throughout the workflow. Several new data products are now available to better serve the broader community.
Data products from the previous pipeline (hereafter the
Legacy pipeline) will continue to be produced through the end of this calendar
year to support direct comparison. All products are accessible through the link
above as well as on the GONG data download page.
The figure below compares the seismic signatures of magnetic
activity on the far side of the Sun as computed using the Legacy pipeline (top
panel) and the upgraded pipeline (bottom panel). In the Legacy pipeline,
regions of strong magnetic field appear as dark areas. In contrast, the
upgraded pipeline provides more detailed information: the farside maps are
shown with a dark background, high magnetic field regions appear as bright
features, and the frontside magnetograms are displayed in grayscale. The identified
farside active regions and their probabilities of appearing on the East limb
are marked by circles in both versions of the pipeline.
The largest sunspot group of 2026
Sunspot group 14478 observed today (June 28, 2026) East of solar central meridian has a total area of 1190 Millionth of Solar Hemisphere (MS...
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The peakfind results for GONG Month 302 show that the frequency shifts have started to decrease indicating that the solar maximum has alrea...
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A notification was posted on the BVES website regarding the outage: Southern California Edison (SCE)- Restoration and Continued Public S...
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On 26 August 2025, GONG at Learmonth (Australia) caught C6.2 flare in active region 14199 near solar East limb. Only a small eruption associ...


