Skywatchers are set to be dazzled by the northern lights over the coming hours, as a geomagnetic storm builds.
Aurora chasers are on high alert as a minor geomagnetic storm is expected to hit Earth soon, potentially triggering ...
NASA is launching rockets into the Northern Lights from Alaska to investigate why auroras have distinct movements such as flickering and pulsating.
A solar explosion called a coronal mass ejection is poised to graze Earth on Friday or Saturday (Jan. 24 or Jan. 25), ...
The northern lights should continue well into the weekend and may even reach down into the middle parts of the US.
The National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration's Space Weather Prediction Center has issued a G1 (Minor) or greater geomagnetic storm watch for Saturday, Jan. 25 due to the potential arrival of a ...
The sun is at the peak of its 11-year cycle. That means an uptick in solar flares will lead to more chances to see the northern lights over the next couple of years.
On January 21, a coronal mass ejection (CME) erupted from the sun and is expected to make contact with Earth soon. The CME (a large expulsion of plasma and magnetic field released from the sun’s ...
A coronal mass ejection earlier this week may pull the northern lights to more northern U.S. states, forecasters said.