A fresh blast of solar wind is set to enhance aurora activity just in time for Valentine's Day. If conditions are right, the ...
The northern lights are best seen between 10 p.m. and 2 a.m. local time, according to NOAA, which recommends traveling to a ...
Geomagnetic storms also cause problems on Earth. The electric currents they create can overload power plants and cause ...
NEW ORLEANS — Solar sails that allow satellites to glide on the light from the sun could soon become a reality. The ...
Valentine's Day could bring a dazzling display of the northern lights for stargazers in some parts of the U.S.
After losing his Pacific Palisades neighborhood in the fires that swept through Los Angeles in January, Kent Tobiska, the CEO ...
The University of Alaska Fairbanks (UAF) expects the aurora borealis will be visible overhead in locations such as Inuvik, ...
This Valentine’s Day, parts of the U.S. may witness the aurora borealis due to a G1 geomagnetic storm forecasted by NOAA.
Keep up to date with northern lights forecasts, alerts and geomagnetic storm warnings with our aurora forecast live blog. A fresh blast of solar wind is set to enhance aurora activity just in time ...
The Valentine's Day northern lights will largely be visible in Canada and Alaska, but a few northern-most states may see the ...
A minor geomagnetic storm—a disturbance of Earth’s magnetic field—is expected Thursday, and is likely caused by high-speed winds from a spot on the sun’s surface, according to NOAA’s ...