Northern Lights May Be Visible In Northern Third Of U.S.: See Map
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Northern Lights May Be Visible In Northern Third Of U.S.: See Map The aurora borealis could dip into mid-latitude states early Friday and again that night as a powerful geomagnetic storm heads toward Earth.A solar flare sent three separate coronal mass ejections from the sun on a direct path to Earth, according to the Space Weather Prediction Center. Together, they are creating rare “halo CME” that could cause significant aurora borealis displays Friday. (Shutterstock)ACROSS AMERICA — Scientists think a powerful geomagnetic storm will hit Earth on Thursday, potentially triggering significant displays of the northern lights early Friday morning and perhaps again that night.
Severe geomagnetic storm activity was expected to strike Earth on Thursday, which could allow for dazzling northern lights displays as far south as Illinois and other mid-latitude states between 1 a.m. and 4 a.m. Friday. Aurora forecasting is tricky and data is still limited, but scientists say ethereal displays may be visible in the northern third of the country.
If you do go out aurora hunting, find a dark sky with clear views to the north.
The Kp index — the measure of the strength of a burst of solar energy — is predicted to be 7 early Friday, according to the Space Weather Prediction Center, which predicts a slightly lower G2 storm, but the Kp index typically results in aurora displays in mid-latitude states. A Kp index of 5 is predicted for Friday night.
The forecast comes after the Space Weather Prediction Center on Monday detected a solar flare that sent three separate coronal mass ejections from the sun on a direct path to Earth.
Together, they resulted in what solar physicist Ryan French at the National Solar Observatory in Boulder, Colorado, called a rare “ halo CME .”
“Wow, I haven’t seen a halo CME this clear in a long time! Unlike an eruption at the edge of the Sun, a halo indicates plasma heading directly towards us,” he wrote Tuesday on the social media platform X. “Today’s halo eruption was caused by a large flare, predicted to cause significant aurora later this week!”
Space.com said aurora chasers should be on “ high alert for some potentially very impressive displays.”
“What a Whopper! Region 3500 on our Sun just fired a near X-class flare and launched a strong Earth-directed #solarstorm. Waiting for coronagraph imagery, but it looks like this storm could arrive by December 1. Excellent #aurora chances, possibly G3-G4 level with this one, especially considering there are at least two solar storms already on their way, ahead of this one,” Skov said on X Tuesday.
The CMEs aren’t expected to reach Earth’s atmosphere, which could cause havoc with the electrical grid and disrupt GPS signals and satellites.
On the maps below, people living in areas above the thin red line have the potential to see northern lights displays over the next couple of days.
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