Solar Minimum: A “relatively large” sunspot makes appearance
by Thomas from The SWLing Post on (#3F7DD)

(Image: spaceweather.com)
(Source: Southgate ARC)
With Solar Minimum right around the corner, sunspot counts are at an almost 10-year low. So it came as a surprise yesterday when a relatively large sunspot emerged near the sun's eastern limb.
AR2699 has a primary dark core larger than Earth with many smaller magnetic condensations trailing behind it, in all stretching more than 75,000 km across the sun's surface.
Rare "solar minimum sunspots" are capable of intense explosions just like sunspots during more active phases of the solar cycle.
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