News

Aurora chasers are on high alert for minor geomagnetic storm conditions from Jan. 24 through to Jan. 25. Northern lights ...
Auroras may be visible from Alaska to New York as an incoming solar storm could spark geomagnetic storm conditions overnight.
A cloud of hot, magnetized plasma — a coronal mass ejection — erupted from the Sun on Wednesday, July 23, headed off into ...
Auroras may be visible from Alaska to Washington as a giant hole in the sun's atmosphere fuels geomagnetic storms with a high-speed solar wind.
Aurora chasers, keep your eyes on ... Geomagnetic storms are classified using a G-scale, which ranks their intensity from G1 (minor) to G5 (extreme). That's good news for aurora chasers!
The northern lights are expected to grace the skies of some northern states in the wake of a coronal mass ejection from the sun.
The aurora borealis has a chance to appear for viewers in Alaska and the upper Midwest, including Minnesota, Wisconsin and ...
NOAA issued a geomagnetic storm warning early Friday, projecting a G2 level storm, indicating moderate strength, noting the storm could pull the northern lights southward as far as northern New York.
Because of these conditions, 14 states have a chance of spotting the aurora borealis tonight, including, Washington, northern Idaho, Montana, Wyoming, North Dakota, South Dakota, Minnesota, Wisconsin, ...
Tracking a geomagnetic storm last October, professional astrophotographer Dan Zafra drove from Las Vegas to Mono Lake with ...
NOAA ranks geomagnetic storms on a five-point scale, with those rated G5, the strongest, being capable of widespread voltage control problems that could lead to power blackouts or even the ...