Wednesday, October 09, 2024

Aurora Watch: Oklahoma has a good shot at Northern Lights on Thursday


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Taken by Twitter user @Jen_McClure10 in Marlow, OK - May 10th, 2024

Heads-up, Oklahoma! Thursday night may be one of the best chances we have of seeing the Aurora Borealis ("Northern Lights") in years! As the result of a powerful solar flare, a severe geomagnetic storm is predicted for Thursday that could send auroras as far south as Alabama and Texas, or deeper.

Quick, non-scientific layman's explainer: The sun goes in regular periods of activity and inactivity. We are currently in the middle of the solar maximum portion of the current Solar Cycle 25, when the sun is frequent solar storms, flares, and sunspot. The current cycle is much more active than the previous one (2008-2019), and the past few months in particular have had several large X-class solar flares that have sent Coronal Mass Ejections (CMEs) in Earth's direction that have, in turn, produced geomagnetic storms with auroras sighted as far south as Arizona and Alabama. 

I became enthralled with spaceweather back in 2003, the maximum year of Solar Cycle 23 (1996-2008). October and November 2003 were extremely active, with the four of the top ten largest flares recorded (including the biggest at ~X45).

Anyway, back to the main thing. A long X1.8-class solar flare ejected a fast-moving CME toward Earth, which will be arriving on Thursday at some point. A severe G4-class geomagnetic storm is predicted for Thursday evening. From NOAA's Space Weather Prediction Center:


Geomagnetic storms generally don't have much effect on day-to-day living, but severe ones can cause high- and low-frequency radio blackouts, power grid problems (a geomagnetic storm knocked Quebec's entire grid offline for 9 nine hours in 1989), radiation exposure on high-latitude flights and spacecraft, satellites and GPS can have problems, et cetera. Here's a run-down of risks at different storm classes.

Some key websites to watch:
Some posts from Twitter with information about the incoming CME and aurora viewing tips:

1. Link to full thread in case tweets don't embed properly. EDIT: this appears to be displaying on mobile correctly (at least some of the time), but might not on desktop browsers. Use the link instead if it won't display. 2.
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5. Link to full thread in case tweets don't embed properly.
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7. a mega-thread worth clicking through:


I'm trying to embed a Twitter list of accounts that specialize in spaceweather and auroras, but this might not work. If it displays below, good, but if not, you can also view the feed here.


Stay tuned for more updates!

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