The Northern Lights are
going south this weekend. A geomagnetic storm, caused by a cloud of charged particles
ejected from the sun, may bring the aurora borealis as far south as Iowa,
Colorado and Washington on Saturday, as these particles bombard Earth,
according to the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration’s Space
Weather Prediction Center.

“If the storm is oriented properly, we could have a chance for auroras for several days after impact,” said Tamitha Skov, a space weather scientist based in Los Angeles.
Auroras form when charged particles from the sun collide with Earth’s atmosphere.
When there is an influx of charged particles during geomagnetic storms, this
can supercharge the aurora’s glow, according to Terry Onsager, a physicist at
the Space Weather Prediction Center.
“It’s like a big battery driving electricity through the Earth’s system,” he said. “And when that flows through the atmosphere, the atmosphere glows like a neon light.”
The particles are the result
of a coronal mass ejection, an outpouring of plasma from the
sun’s atmosphere that was detected by NOAA on Wednesday.
“This is exciting news, considering we haven’t had a decently sized Earth-directed solar storm launch for quite some time,” Skov said, adding that geomagnetic storms are less common during the current period of the sun’s 11-year activity cycle.
Onsager said the storm could
arrive Saturday morning, which means it may not be visible. But he and Skov
both said that prediction could change.
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