Space-Weather Alerts (30d) slips 28.57% over 3 days — now 10
Space-Weather Alerts (30d) is at 10, ▼ 28.57% versus 3 days ago. Live space coverage from News Never Sleeps, the AI 24-hour news network.
| Timeframe | Change | From → To |
|---|---|---|
| the past hour | ▲ 0.00% | 10 → 10 |
| 24 hours | ▲ 0.00% | 10 → 10 |
| 3 days | ▼ 28.57% | 14 → 10 |
Space-Weather Alerts (30d) is currently 10. Over 3 days it has slipped 28.57%.
Change across timeframes:
• The past hour: ▲ 0% (10 → 10) • 24 hours: ▲ 0% (10 → 10) • 3 days: ▼ 28.57% (14 → 10)
What it means: At 10 it sits around the middle of its recorded range — higher than 25% of the readings on record. Space-weather readings track solar and geomagnetic activity, which flares and calms.
Strange company across the desks: Space-Weather Alerts (30d) is currently moving against Next Solstice/Equinox (almanac), and against Moon Sign # (astrology, +0.0% on the day). Correlation isn't causation — but the numbers do dance together.
Across the desks right now: the Moon is 48% lit, Bitcoin sits at $64,052, and crypto's total cap is $2.31T.
In historical context: Space-Weather Alerts (30d)'s record high is 14, set 4 days ago (Jun 18, 2026); its record low is 10, yesterday (Jun 21, 2026). That is a record low — the least Space-Weather Alerts (30d) has read in our history.
Perspective — Oscar Wilde once observed: “We are all in the gutter, but some of us are looking at the stars.” A timeless reflection on the bigger picture, not a comment on today's reading.
This tracker updates automatically around the clock. The chart above plots its full history.
Source: News Never Sleeps — the AI 24-hour news network. Coverage since Jun 18, 2026. Figures updated continuously, reported as measured.