This solar event only happens once every 11 years
and signals what physicists call the Solar Maximum - a time when the Sun's
solar activity is at its highest and due this winter of 2013.

During this peak in activity the outbursts of solar energy can increase the amount of cosmic and UV rays coming towards Earth and this can interfere with radio communications, cause solar bursts of light - known as flares - and can affect the planet's temperature. A storm is coming: Sun's poles are set to FLIP within four months and it could lead to bad weather and radio disruption. The sun's magnetic field reverses its polarity once every 11 years or so.
Flip represents
a peak in solar activity where bursts of energy are released. These bursts can lead to space storms and
changes to Earth's climate. Radio
and satellite communications may also be affected. The sun’s magnetic
field is expected to flip in the next three to four months and it could lead to
changes in our climate, storms and disruption to satellites. Physicists
from Stanford University believe the Sun's magnetic fields will flip before the
end of the year, reversing their polarity. This will cause an increase in solar
energy and could lead to changes in climate and satellite disruption. The
reversal happens once every 11 years or so.
During the sun's cycle the amount
of solar activity reaches peaks and troughs known as Solar Maximum and Solar
Minimum. During Solar Maximum the amount of solar activity is at its
highest due to a flip, or reversal, of the sun's magnetic field. Since 1976
there have been three Solar Maximums and they occur roughly every 11 years,
although this can vary from between nine and 14 years book club brings you the sun where we are depends on geometry of our Galaxy and rate of evolution. A big question is how can humanity determinate a coexistence, since there is unwillingness to change or visit other places. A probe will sent to observe how our sun star evolves, as book club has been championing this forward.

During this peak in activity the outbursts of solar energy can increase the amount of cosmic and UV rays coming towards Earth and this can interfere with radio communications, cause solar bursts of light - known as flares - and can affect the planet's temperature. A storm is coming: Sun's poles are set to FLIP within four months and it could lead to bad weather and radio disruption. The sun's magnetic field reverses its polarity once every 11 years or so.


During a Solar Maximum, large numbers of sunspots
appear and the sun's irradiates - or electromagnetic radiation - output grows
by around 0.1 per cent.





Changes in the magnetic field affect what's called the 'current sheet. 'This sheet juts out for billions of miles from the Sun's equator where according to NASA the star's slowly-rotating magnetic field includes an electric current. Although the current of electricity is small, there is a large amount flowing through a region around 10,000km thick. The heliosphere - a region of space and our solar system that is directly influenced by the Sun and its solar activity - is controlled by this sheet. When a magnetic field flips it causes the current sheet to become wavy, which Scherrer described to Science@Nasa as being like the seams on a baseball.

As Earth orbits the Sun, the planet dips in and out of the sheet and these transition scan cause stormy space weather. It can also affect cosmic rays, which are particles that travel almost at light speed, and these rays can be dangerous to astronauts and space stations. Some researchers believe these rays also directly affect how cloudy Earth is. Wilcox's Solar Observatory is continuing to monitor the changes and is set to release a statement when the reversal takes place.
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