Auroras could appear over the next week as solar activity increases | CNN (2024)

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Science / Space

By Ashley Strickland, CNN

5 minute read

Updated 2:39 PM EDT, Fri May 31, 2024

Auroras could appear over the next week as solar activity increases | CNN (2)

Northern lights glow over trees in Xilingol League in northern China's Inner Mongolia region early Sunday, May 12.

Auroras could appear over the next week as solar activity increases | CNN (3)

Aurora borealis shines above the Chicago skyline on Saturday, May 11.

Auroras could appear over the next week as solar activity increases | CNN (4)

A person watches the northern lights from atop a rock formation near Sheffield, England, on May 11.

Auroras could appear over the next week as solar activity increases | CNN (5)

Aurora borealis is reflected in water at Manning Park in British Columbia, on May 11.

Auroras could appear over the next week as solar activity increases | CNN (6)

People look at the aurora australis on the outskirts of Christchurch, New Zealand, on May 11.

Auroras could appear over the next week as solar activity increases | CNN (7)

In this long exposure photo, the blinking lights of a plane streak through the aurora borealis over Lake Berryessa, California, on May 11.

Auroras could appear over the next week as solar activity increases | CNN (8)

The northern lights shine in the night sky above the Molenviergang in Aarlanderveen, the Netherlands, early May 11.

Auroras could appear over the next week as solar activity increases | CNN (9)

The northern lights illuminate the sky in Debrad, Slovakia, on May 11.

Auroras could appear over the next week as solar activity increases | CNN (10)

The aurora borealis glows in the night sky over the mountains in Le Col des Mosses pass, Ormont-Dessous, Switzerland, during the early hours of May 11.

Auroras could appear over the next week as solar activity increases | CNN (11)

The aurora borealis illuminates the skies over the southwestern Siberian town of Tara, in Russia's Omsk region, on May 11.

Auroras could appear over the next week as solar activity increases | CNN (12)

The aurora borealis glows over Vienna on May 11.

Auroras could appear over the next week as solar activity increases | CNN (13)

The northern lights are seen in a rural area west of Fort Lauderdale, Florida, on Friday, May 10.

Auroras could appear over the next week as solar activity increases | CNN (14)

People photograph the northern lights from Whitley Bay, England, on May 10.

Auroras could appear over the next week as solar activity increases | CNN (15)

The northern lights flare in the sky over a farmhouse in Brunswick, Maine, on May 10.

Auroras could appear over the next week as solar activity increases | CNN (16)

Aurora australis, or the southern lights, glow over Villarrica volcano in Pucón, Chile, on May 10.

Auroras could appear over the next week as solar activity increases | CNN (17)

People stop along a country road near London, Ontario, to view the aurora borealis on May 10. Auroras are often observed in Canada's northern regions, but rarely in southern Ontario.

Auroras could appear over the next week as solar activity increases | CNN (18)

The aurora borealis lights are seen over western Tennessee out the window of a flight from Washington, DC, to Memphis, Tennessee, on May 10.

Auroras could appear over the next week as solar activity increases | CNN (19)

The northern lights are seen in the sky over Rich Hill, Missouri, on May 10.

Auroras could appear over the next week as solar activity increases | CNN (20)

The northern lights glow in the night sky in Brandenburg, Germany, on May 10.

Auroras could appear over the next week as solar activity increases | CNN (21)

In this long exposure photo, cars pass by as people look at the night sky towards the northern lights in Estacada, Oregon, on May 10.

Auroras could appear over the next week as solar activity increases | CNN (22)

The northern lights seen over Cumming, Georgia, on May 10.

Auroras could appear over the next week as solar activity increases | CNN (23)

People pose for a photograph with the aurora borealis in Crosby, England, on May 10.

Auroras could appear over the next week as solar activity increases | CNN (24)

The aurora borealis glows over Edinburgh, Scotland, on May 10.

Auroras could appear over the next week as solar activity increases | CNN (25)

The aurora borealis is seen at Crosby Beach in Liverpool, England, on May 10.

In pictures: Auroras light the sky during rare solar storm

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Colorful auroras could appear again soon over parts of the United States — including northern and upper Midwest states from New York to Idaho — due to a solar storm that may affect Earth, according to the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration’s Space Weather Prediction Center.

The center, a division of the National Weather Service, issued a modern geomagnetic storm watch, known as a G2, for Friday and Saturday. Unlike the G5, or extreme geomagnetic storm, that occurred on May 10, moderate storm watches are not uncommon, according to the center.

But the aurora-causing solar flares and coronal mass ejections currently spewing from the sun are a result of the same sunspots that triggered solar activity in May, according to Dr. Ryan French, solar physicist at the National Solar Observatory in Boulder, Colorado.

Coronal mass ejections are large clouds of ionized gas called plasma and magnetic fields that erupt from the sun’s outer atmosphere. When these outbursts are directed at Earth, they can cause geomagnetic storms, or major disturbances of Earth’s magnetic field.

As the sun nears solar maximum — the peak in its 11-year cycle, expected this year — it becomes more active, and researchers have observed increasingly intense solar flares erupting from the fiery orb.

Scientists have developed a way to produce models of where the magnetic field lines are several times each day. Here we have created a time-lapse version of these models over four days (2-3 each day) to give you a peek at how these change over time. The spiraling arcs of magnetic field lines emerge from active regions and connect back to areas with the opposite polarity. The field lines are more concentrated where regions are more magnetically intense. And of course, they rotate with the rotation of the Sun. NASA/Solar Dynamics Observatory Related article Scientists locate origin of the sun’s magnetic field

Increased solar activity causes auroras that dance around Earth’s poles, known as the northern lights, or aurora borealis, and southern lights, or aurora australis. When the energized particles from coronal mass ejections reach Earth’s magnetic field, they interact with gases in the atmosphere to create different colored lights in the sky.

The sun rotates on its axis once every 27 days, which scientists have learned by tracking sunspots. These dark regions, some of which can reach the size of Earth or larger, are driven by the star’s strong and constantly shifting magnetic fields.

Auroras could appear over the next week as solar activity increases | CNN (27)

The northern lights were visible over Rochester, New York, on May 11.

The large, complex clusters of sunspots on the sun’s surface that drove increased solar activity in May have survived their rotation around the sun. The European Space Agency’s Solar Orbiter mission, currently studying the backside of the sun, was able to monitor the progress of the sunspots while they were out of view of Earth’s telescopes.

Now, the sunspots are returning to the side of the sun facing Earth, which means the chances for dazzling auroral displays could increase over the next week, experts say.

The birth of solar storms

While it’s typical for sunspot clusters to survive two to three rotations around the sun, they typically decay after one rotation and become less active, French said.

The sunspot cluster coming back around now is still capable of producing X-class flares, the largest of solar flares, but the frequency appears to have decreased, he said.

French observed two X-class flares per day for about six days in May.

“It’s probably the highest cluster of X-class flares that we’ve had in a couple of decades,” French said. “This current solar cycle seems to be more active than the 2014 peak, but not as active as the 2003 peak.”

Auroras could appear over the next week as solar activity increases | CNN (28)

The sunspots responsible for the May 10 solar storm began much larger (left) before they completed a rotation around the sun. Now, the sunspots (right) have reappeared and are less complex, solar physicist Dr. Ryan French said.

Now, the sunspots are producing flares every two days, so the frequency has gone down, and the complexity of the sunspot cluster has decreased, French said.

Earth is predicted “to just catch the very edge” of the coronal mass ejection currently en route, French said.

The sunspots will face Earth in a more direct way between Tuesday and Thursday, French said.

“Any larger eruptions during that time, and a few days outside of that window, could cause an eruption heading our way and that could cause a geomagnetic storm,” French said. “The frequency of things is decreasing, but you only need one to cause a large geomagnetic storm. Whether that one will be large enough to cause something matching what we saw in mid-May I think is unlikely.”

Keep an eye out for auroras during that Tuesday to Thursday window as well as a few days after it, French said. The auroras could be visible to millions, but the locations depend on if any coronal mass ejections affect Earth.

A panel of experts typically declare the peak of solar maximum well after it has passed, so scientists can’t say whether solar maximum is occurring right now. But an increased chance of solar activity is expected over the next two years, French said.

KARS, TURKIYE - MAY 18: A view of moon, appearing in the sky in the evening hours in Kars, Turkey, on May 18, 2024. (Photo by Omer Tarsuslu/Anadolu via Getty Images) Omer Tarsuslu/Anadolu/Getty Images Related article Why scientists say we need to send clocks to the moon — and soon

“The thing about solar cycles is sometimes they kind of have a twin peak,” said Shawn Dahl, service coordinator for the Space Weather Prediction Center. “Sometimes the (sun’s) southern hemisphere or the northern hemisphere will kind of peak first.”

Near the peak of solar maximum, sunspots tend to gather around the equator. But the sunspot clusters that have been active over the past month were in the northern and southern hemispheres of the sun, Dahl noted.

While scientists can track active sunspot clusters, others could appear at any time during the lead-up to solar maximum.

“We can have a new sunspot group emerge right in front of us,” Dahl said. “We have no way of knowing that’s about to happen until we see it. That’s just the way it’s going to be over the course of this year all the way through next year and even into 2026.”

Lessons learned from solar storms

The May 10 storm was a historic one, but fortunately it didn’t reach the level of the Carrington Event of 1859, which caused telegraph stations to spark and catch fire and remains the most intense geomagnetic storm ever recorded.

Before May 10, the last G5 storm to hit Earth occurred in 2003, resulting in power outages in Sweden and damaging power transformers in South Africa.

Since then, governments have taken measures with legislation, research and operations to mitigate the potentially negative impacts of solar storms, Dahl said.

To mark the 34th anniversary of the launch of the Hubble Space Telescope, NASA released this photo of the Little Dumbbell Nebula. Also known as Messier 76, the nebula is 3,400 light-years away from Earth. NASA, ESA, STScI Related article Hubble Space Telescope marks 34 years with new portrait of a ‘cosmic dumbbell’

The solar storm on May 10 was the most successfully mitigated space weather storm in history, Dahl said.

“All this work and preparation led to this moment, and the nation could not have been any more prepared for a space weather storm,” he said.

With these events, there’s always a chance that communications, the electric power grid, navigation, and radio and satellite operations will be affected. During the May 10 storm, power grid and satellite operators kept satellites in order and properly in orbit and managed the buildup of intense geomagnetic currents on the grid systems.

Extreme solar storms can cause Earth’s atmosphere to swell, which changes the level of drag that satellites experience, so it’s more difficult for operators to keep them within their specific trajectories, according to the European Space Agency.

“There were a lot of effects that people aren’t going to hear about because things were successfully mitigated where we weren’t seeing direct impacts as much,” Dahl said.

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Auroras could appear over the next week as solar activity increases | CNN (2024)
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