jFWD BY JENNIFER RAE VLIET; We ARE AT 6 MASS EJECTIONS AS OF THE EXPERTS ASSESSMENT THIS MORNING. MASSIVE SUNSPOT GROUP. IMPACT TO BEGIN TONIGHT ON THE FIRST FOUR. X3 ERUPTION THIS MORNING WITH PLASMA RELEASE WITH A FULL HALO BLASTS EQUALING 6 IN 2 DAYS AND ALL WILL HIT THE EARTH. THE REVERBERATIONS TO LAST UP TO A WEEK. WITH EARTHS WEAKENING MAGNETIC FIELD, WE HAVE A RISK THAT NEEDS TO BE AKNOWLEDGED OF A CATASTROPHIC EVENT. A GOOD TIME TO PRAY FOR GOD’S MERCY ON US.

The National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) issued the Severe (G4) Geomagnetic Storm Watch late Thursday – which itself was the first such alert aired since January 2005, when the earth was hit with the highest dose of radiation it had seen in a half-century. This time around, the ‘unusual event’ could  disrupt electronic devices like GPS and parts of power grids, the American agency said – while citing how it may also drape a huge portion of the country in a spectacular circle of light. It follows a series of solar flares that began Wednesday during which several large expulsions of plasma from the Sun were spotted – paving the way for the alert issued Thursday. In it. officials explained how the expulsions of matter and magnetic field from the celestial body’s atmosphere could cause problems for millions of earthlings.

A rare and powerful solar storm may occur in outer space today which could wreak havoc on earth, officials have warned – the first in nearly 20 years if it happens.

At least five streams of plasma, known as coronal mass ejections (CMEs), are heading toward Earth, prompting the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) to issue a severe geomagnetic storm watch for Friday into the weekend.

This is the first such alert aired since 2005 when Earth was hit with the highest dose of radiation in a half-century.

This time around, the ‘unusual event’ could disrupt electronic devices like GPS and parts of power grids, NOAA said – while citing how it may also drape a huge portion of the country, as far south as Alabama, in colorful natural lights. 

The CMEs exploded from a massive sunspot, an area on the sun that is cooler than the surface, on May 8 – paving the way for Thursday’s alert.

In it, officials explained how the expulsions of matter and magnetic field from the celestial body’s atmosphere could cause problems for millions of earthlings as soon as noon ET Friday.

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