The storm should arrive today or tomorrow, and could bring with it some brilliant aurorae.
Space enthusiasts get excited! The National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration has predicted that thousands of people ...
The northern lights will put on a spectacular show this weekend, following two powerful solar storms. One of these solar ...
Aurora chasers get those cameras on charge! Due to heightened solar activity, the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) Space Weather Prediction Center has issued a geomagnetic storm ...
A coronal mass ejection from the sun is expected to trigger a G3 geomagnetic storm, causing the northern lights.
The sunspot AR3835 erupted on Sunday (Sept. 22) during Earth's equinox when even a glancing blow can cause a geomagnetic ...
A storm could be-fall us. Colorful leaves and cooler temperatures aren’t the only thing autumn is potentially bringing. Meteorologists predict that Earth could be blasted by a geomagnetic storm ...
The heightened potential for more geomagnetic storms creates an elevated risk for things like disrupted satellite signals, radio communications, internet and electrical power grids. The increased ...
The Earth is expected to experience a geomagnetic storm this week following the autumnal equinox. A sunspot erupted on Sunday, generating a coronal mass ejection (CME) on a trajectory toward Earth.
A burst of geomagnetic storms this week could return the northern lights to Colorado skies on Thursday and Friday night, according to the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration.
The sun has thrown a chunk of its plasma in the Earth's direction, which could spark minor geomagnetic storms and auroras in our atmosphere. This coronal mass ejection (CME) is due to collide with ...
The sun unleashed a massive X-class solar flare — the most powerful it can generate — on Tuesday evening that has the potential to pummel our planet with a powerful geomagnetic storm this weekend.