A flash of the highest power occurred on the Sun
Scientists suggest that the phenomenon will not be reflected on Earth at all.

On December 8, scientists recorded a high-class explosion on the Sun, TASS reports, citing the FSBI Institute of Applied Geophysics.
According to the information, the X2.1 outbreak was recorded on December 8 at 10:01 Tashkent time, and its duration was 15 minutes. In addition, two M-class outbursts occurred on Monday night — M2.5 and M2.1.
The X-class outbreak occurred in the year’s largest stain complex, which consists of regions 4294, 4296, and 4298.
As a rule, such short-range explosions do not lead to plasma emissions, which are the main method of impacting the Earth, although the first videos that have already arrived from orbit seem to show the movement of matter upwards from the epicenter of the explosion. For this reason, there is a possibility that part of the solar matter has gone into interplanetary space, but the chances of hitting the Earth from the observed angle are still very small, and the geoavailability of the event is low, — the solar astronomy laboratory of SRI RAS clarified.
It is noted that flares are usually accompanied by emissions of solar plasma, the clouds of which, upon reaching the Earth, can provoke magnetic storms.
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