X5.16 Solar Flare Unleashes Record Storm: Radio Blackout Precedes Extreme G5 Threat

Edited by: Uliana S.

A G4+ geomagnetic storm is currently occurring on Earth.

The Sun recently unleashed a series of disturbances of rare intensity toward Earth, once again showcasing its formidable power and volatility. On November 11, 2025, Active Region 4274 became the source of an X5.16 class solar flare, an event officially recorded as the most powerful for the current solar cycle. This colossal burst of electromagnetic energy traversed the distance separating the Sun and Earth in a mere eight minutes. The immediate consequence of this rapid arrival was a widespread phenomenon known as a “radio blackout,” which severely disrupted high-frequency communications across the entire sunlit hemisphere of the planet, specifically impacting vast regions including Africa and Europe.

NOAA specialist Шон Даль on current space weather and future forecasts

However, the most significant and potentially damaging repercussions were not immediate but followed shortly thereafter. The flare was succeeded by a potent Coronal Mass Ejection (CME)—a massive cloud of superheated plasma and magnetic field lines hurtling through interplanetary space. This particular CME was clocked traveling at an estimated velocity of approximately 3000 km/s. Data gathered by specialized observatories positioned at the crucial Lagrange point L1 confirmed that three separate plasma clouds, ejected from the Sun on November 9, 10, and 11, began converging on Earth starting November 12. This sequence of events set the stage for a truly exceptional geomagnetic storm.

Heliophysicist Stefan Burns with a report on urgent space weather

The initial impact came when the first two ejections arrived sooner than scientists had modeled, and their collective force far exceeded initial scientific expectations. The resulting collision with Earth's protective magnetosphere was so forceful that, at 01:20 UTC on November 12, a G4-level magnetic storm was officially registered. This designation signifies a 'Severe' geomagnetic event, capable of causing widespread voltage control problems and triggering false alarms on protective devices.

Sean Dahl, the coordinator for the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration’s (NOAA) space weather forecasting service, provided essential context, explaining that the situation remains extremely volatile and dynamic. Dahl highlighted a critical factor: the magnetic polarity of the first arriving CMEs was oriented oppositely to Earth’s own magnetic field. This antagonistic alignment dramatically amplified the interaction, leading to the rapid escalation of the storm intensity witnessed early on November 12.

Despite the severity of the G4 event, scientists are still bracing for the primary threat. This is anticipated to arrive around midday on November 12—the third, fastest, and most powerful mass ejection, directly associated with the record X5.16 flare. Experts warn that the potential impact of this final, massive plasma cloud could push the geomagnetic disturbance into the highest category, an extreme G5-level storm. Such an event carries the risk of widespread power outages and severe damage to satellite infrastructure.

In response to these escalating risks, specialists have urgently alerted operators responsible for critical infrastructure, including power grids and satellite systems, about the high probability of system failures and widespread disruptions. The singularity of this event lies in the compounding, cascading effect created by three successive solar strikes that possess the potential to merge into a single, overwhelming geomagnetic shockwave. The ultimate severity of this cosmic storm remains dependent on the precise moment the third ejection reaches the monitoring sensors located at the L1 point, which will afford inhabitants on Earth a crucial, though extremely narrow, warning window—just a few tens of minutes—to prepare for the potential peak of this unprecedented solar activity.

Sources

  • NTN24 | Últimas Noticias de América y el Mundo.

  • NOAA / NWS Space Weather Prediction Center

  • Space.com

  • India Today

  • The Watchers

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