An eruption on the sun didn't bring the aurora to Pennsylvania or Oregon this week, but more solar outbursts are expected soon
An eruption on the sun didn't bring the aurora to Pennsylvania or Oregon this week, but more solar outbursts are expected soon
- An eruption on the sun's surface sent plasma and charged particles speeding towards Earth this week.
- Forecasts suggested that this coronal mass ejection would reach our planet Wednesday as a solar storm that could interfere with radio, GPS, and power grids.
- There was a possibility the aurora borealis could be visible from Pennsylvania to Iowa to Oregon, but in the end, the northern lights didn't appear that far south.
- The sun is entering a period of increasing violent activity, so more opportunities for the northern US to see the aurora are likely.
An eruption on the sun this week prompted warnings from the National Weather Service.
The outburst sent plasma and magnetically charged particles, called a coronal mass ejection (CME), speeding towards Earth. If those particles had hit our atmosphere just right, the NWS said, they could have inundated the planet in a geomagnetic storm that would interfere with power grids, GPS, and radio communications, and even affect satellites' orbits aroun
These impacts could have extended into the northern US and brought the aurora borealis - a reaction between solar particles and Earth's atmosphere - creeping down into regions from Pennsylvania to Iowa to Oregon.
But when the CME arrived on Wednesday, there were no northern lights in these lower states.
The space-weather branch of the National Weather Service had initially issued a watch for a "strong" geomagnetic storm on Thursday, but it downgraded the watch to "minor" after the CME's arrival.
This was because the CME's magnetic field was pointing north, according to Mike Hapgood, a space-weather consultant at the Rutherford Appleton Laboratory in the UK. It would need to face south in order to wash far enough through the North Pole opening in Earth's magnetic field to reach the US.
"We're unlikely to see much activity, and the aurora will stay further north over Canada," Hapgood told Business Insider. The northern reaches of Maine and Michigan may still catch a glimpse of the green lights, though.
But Illinoisans and Iowans shouldn't despair. There may be better opportunities for them to see the aurora in the near future.
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