The auroras were seen as far south as Philadelphia and northern New Jersey last night (June 22), and gave astronauts aboard the International Space Station a stunning celestial light show. The solar storm that caused the auroras was declared a level G4 (severe), with a maximum possible ranking of G5 (extreme).
Auroras, also known as the northern and southern lights, are caused by bursts of powerful particles ejected from the sun that collide with Earth’s atmosphere. The solar storm behind last night’s spectacular light display continues to rage, and officials say auroras should be visible again tonight (June 23) for viewers in Canada and parts of the U.S.
Photographer Jeff Berkes snapped photos of the rippling northern lights over a field in southern Philadelphia. In an email to Space.com, Berkes said these were the most intense northern lights he has ever seen in this location.
Meteorologist Eric Holthaus wrote in an article for Slate that the coronal mass ejection had picked up two smaller, slower ejections from last week, building in power as the particles raced toward Earth. Once there, they whipped up a geomagnetic storm as the Earth’s magnetic field adjusted to the new addition — and the results could be seen all across the northern United States and Canada.
The solar storm erupted from the sun during the day on Sunday (June 21). As the sun belched out a fiery solar flare, it also released a huge coronal mass ejection — a stream of charged particles. The size and strength of this particular particle ejection were dubbed “impressive” by scientists working on NASA’s Advanced Composition Explorer mission as the storm shot by the ACE spacecraft on the way to Earth Sunday afternoon.
A solar storm lit up the night sky above Mammoth Hot Springs last night. #AuroraBorealis #NorthernLights pic.twitter.com/s9x79docjv — YellowstoneNPS (@YellowstoneNPS) June 23, 2015
The storm reached severe levels as of 1:13 a.m. EDT (0513 GMT) today, according to the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration’s Space Weather Prediction Center, and fast solar wind conditions and strong magnetic fields will likely continue — meaning auroras will likely be visible again tonight for lucky skywatchers.
Read more at Discovery News
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