More kaleidoscopic light shows could be visible in the sky across the Northern Hemisphere as a powerful solar storm ramps up.
An extreme geomagnetic storm that first hit last week is expected to become more intense, according to the U.S. National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, as several coronal mass ejections are due to bombard Earth's outer atmosphere in space later on May 12.
That means many people who haven't witnessed a rare aurora borealis may still have a chance to see it. People throughout the United States, United Kingdom, and other locations worldwide reported sightings Saturday of the Northern Lights, usually only visible at night near the North Pole. However, a similar effect happens near Antarctica, too.
The sun had a strong solar flare — a gigantic burst of energy — at 12:26 p.m. ET Sunday. This flare was classified as an X-1.0, among the most intense flares observed. Experts warned the incident could create temporary problems or lost signals for users of high-frequency radio communication.
"Solar flares send tons of energy whizzing through space at the speed of light," according to NASA. "Sometimes flares come with huge solar eruptions. These eruptions are called coronal mass ejections."
SEE ALSO:A spacecraft ‘touched’ the sun. Here’s how it survived.Tweet may have been deleted
An aurora's display of colors is the result of electrons shot out of the sun during solar storms. As the charged particles reach Earth, they travel along the planet's invisible magnetic field lines into the atmosphere, interacting with the air. When those particles strike gasses, they heat up and glow, according to NASA.
The colors differ depending on the type of atmospheric gas and its altitude. Oxygen glows red or blue, while nitrogen can create green, blue, or pink. The recent strong solar storm conditions are causing the aurora around the north pole to be much more widespread, allowing people who live farther south to see them.
Tweet may have been deleted
Similar to storm seasons on Earth, the sun experiences a weather pattern that repeats every 11 years. At the beginning and end of the cycle, that activity is at its calmest. But solar activity increases, climaxing in the middle of the cycle and causing the sun to roil with giant eruptions.
Right now that cycle is about to peak, close to reaching its maximum point in mid-2025. That's why reports of solar flares and coronal mass ejections — plasma spewed from the sun's outer atmosphere, called the corona — are more abundant in the news.
Coronal mass ejections like the ones approaching Earth, or CMEs, are referred to as "space weather." Though the sun is about 93 million miles away, space weather can affect Earth and other parts of the solar system.
Tweet may have been deleted
Scientists have a limited ability to forecast space weather. Here, the atmosphere and magnetic field shield people against the most harmful health impacts of solar radiation. However, these events can have catastrophic consequences on technology, disrupting power grids, telecommunications, and GPS systems.
Though these incidents don’t happen often, a solar flare in March 1989, for example, caused all of Quebec, Canada, to experience a 12-hour power outage. It also jammed radio signals for Radio Free Europe.
Tweet may have been deleted
Prior to Sunday's flare, the sun ejected two other strong solar flares just before 9:30 p.m. ET Friday and 8 a.m. ET Saturday, according to NASA. The U.S. space agency's Solar Dynamics Observatory, which watches the sun constantly, has snapped pictures of these events as well. The previous two flares were classified as X-5.8 and X-1.5, respectively.
NOAA, which is continuing to monitor the storm for the U.S. government, said these flares seem to be linked to a sunspot estimated to be perhaps 15 times wider than Earth.
TopicsNASA
(责任编辑:時尚)
Tourist survives for month in frozen New Zealand wilderness after partner dies
Google's Australian addition to its mobile AR puts koalas in your house
'Derek DelGaudio's In & Of Itself' on Hulu casts a unique spell
Khan Academy review: An essential homeschooling resource
Two states took big steps this week to get rid of the tampon taxDespite IOC ban, Rio crowds get their political messages across
The Olympics aren't meant to be a place for political expression -- the International Olympic Commit
...[详细]Bernie Sanders predicted Trump's election night chaos with terrifying precision
Predicting exactly how Election Day will run can be a dangerous game, as plenty of people learned on
...[详细]Parler left its content, even deleted posts, out in the open — and archivists have saved it all
If you ever posted content on the right-wing social media platform Parler, odds are that it’s
...[详细]How fantasy football exploded online and kept Yahoo relevant
InTales of the Early Internet, Mashable explores online life through 2007 — back before social
...[详细]'Rocket League' Championship Series Season 2 offers $250,000 prize pool
Rocket League。's competitive scene is just getting started.
。The。 Rocket League。Championship Series i
...[详细]
This year was eternal, but hey. We had memes. 2020 was unprecedented. That word has been used all to
...[详细]White supremacists responsible for most 2020 domestic terror attacks
The numbers are in.White supremacists are responsible for the majority of terrorist plots and attack
...[详细]Twitter goes down, and it's probably for the best
Twitter finally struck a blow against doomscrolling. Everyone's favorite time suck went down Thursda
...[详细]Man stumbles upon his phone background in real life
Life imitates tech. Or, perhaps it's the other way around.Reddit user xbshooterwas traveling near Sa
...[详细]White supremacists responsible for most 2020 domestic terror attacks
The numbers are in.White supremacists are responsible for the majority of terrorist plots and attack
...[详细]Donald Trump's tangled web of Russian influence

How to be a witch without stealing other people's cultures
