New Telescope to "Predict Trajectory" of Solar Flares



by Mitch Battros - Earth Changes Media


Many of you are familiar with my books and several interviews on radio and television. I am often asked if I could predict (monitoring current scientific instruments) what area of Earth would receive the hardest hit. My answer has always been; "the best we can do is tell you which hemisphere." It appears that has changed.

Australia has unveiled a new radio telescope in the remote outback that will give the world a vastly improved view of the Sun and much faster warnings on massive solar storms. Solar flares and CMEs (coronal mass ejections) produce an eruption of charged particles that can wreck havoc on Earth's magnetic field.
 
Steven Tingay, director of The Murchison Widefield Array (MWA) radio telescope says: "This telescope will be able to detect the trajectory detect solar flares and CMEs on the Sun's surface." These solar events could knock out power grids, damage communication satellites, and can create extreme atmospheric weather conditions.
 
FULL ARTICLE - http://bit.ly/VdPyPq

Mitch Battros
Producer - Earth Changes Media
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