


Routine Space Environment Product Issued Weekly
Issued by NWS
Issued by NWS
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462 FXXX06 KWNP 070326 WEKHIL :Product: 7-day Space Weather Highlights :Issued: 2025 Apr 07 0314 UTC # Prepared by the US Dept. of Commerce, NOAA, Space Weather Prediction Center # Product description and SWPC contact on the Web # https://www.swpc.noaa.gov/content/subscription-services # # 7-day Space Weather Highlights # Highlights of Solar and Geomagnetic Activity 31 March - 06 April 2025 Solar activity ranged from low to moderate levels. An M5.6 flare on Tuesday at 0734 UTC from Region 4046 (N10, L=298, class/area=Cho/0250 on 01 April) was the largest of the week. It was accompanied by a 195 sfu Tenflare and some unremarkable discrete frequency bursts. No Earth-directed CME was associated with this event, and in fact, all CME detections throughout the week were judged to miss Earth. The only other M-flare for the remainder of the week occurred later that same day at 2231 UTC, an M2.5 from Region 4048 (S16, L=278, class/area=EKC/0450), the largest active region on the disk throughout the week. The only other M-flare to occur earlier in the week, an M1.2 event, happened on 31 March at 1024. This was also from Region 4048, and was associated with an enhancement in proton flux described in the next paragraph. Solar particle events more than made up for the lackluster flare performance. Proton flux had been rising, most likely in response to an X1.1 flare that had occurred late last week (see PRF 2578). The 10 MeV protons crossed the 10 pfu threshold briefly on 31 Mar at 1105 UTC before falling below at 1115 UTC. This bump was possibly related to the M1.2 event described earlier. There was only a brief respite, however, because the flux again crossed the 10 pfu threshold at 1430 UTC, peaked on 01 Apr at 0425 UTC (147 pfu), and ended on 02 Apr at 0910 UTC. Proton flux was above the 100 pfu threshold on 01 April, from 0205 UTC to 0910 UTC. Note: In the 10 MeV proton event summary, the start time was recorded as 31/1105 UTC despite the subsequent 3 hours below the 10 pfu threshold. The greater than 2 MeV electron flux at geosynchronous orbit was high on 31 Mar-01 April before falling to moderate levels on 2-4 April. A fast solar wind stream became geoeffective on 04 April and drove flux back to high levels on 05-07 April. Geomagnetic field activity was at quiet to active levels to begin the week, with an isolated minor storm period on 03 Apr attributed to a solar sector boundary crossing. By 04 Apr, conditions had increased to minor storm levels with the arrival of a negative polarity coronal hole and fast wind stream. Activity peaked at moderate storm levels (Kp=6m) during the first synoptic period of 05 April. Conditions remained at disturbed, ranging from unsettled to minor storm levels, through the first period of 06 April. Once the fast stream became established, conditions decreased to active to unsettled levels which persisted through the end of the week.