Several U.S. states will be able to view the Northern Lights tonight, including Alaska, New York and Montana.
Elevated geomagnetic activity could allow the northern lights to be seen farther south than usual tonight, according to NOAA.
NOAA warns of likely G1-class geomagnetic storms on Thursday, Feb. 5, through Friday, Feb. 6, as a coronal mass ejection from ...
The solar storm was triggered by an intense X8.3-class flare on Feb. 1, followed by another powerful X4.2 flare on Feb. 4, ...
We could be in for a Northern Light show of epic proportions. A barrage of intense flares erupted from the Sun earlier this ...
The lights are forecasted to reach 11 northern states near the Canadian border.
Aurora photographer Dennis Lehtonen, 30, talks with PEOPLE about where to spot the northern lights in 2026 ...
The astronomer Edmond Halley, the namesake for Halley’s comet, linked the northern lights to the Earth’s magnetic field, setting off research into the science behind them. He expected to die without ...
Solar activity is ramping up, which means the northern lights are appearing farther south than usual. In 2026, people across ...
The northern lights may be seen in Massachusetts tonight as an X-class solar flare could cause a severe geomagnetic storm.
Skies stayed dim on Monday night, but on Tuesday, they lit up with hues of blue, green and deep purple, a contrast to the red-tinted colors that appeared over the state when the lights, also known as ...
A coronal mass ejection could interact with the Earth, causing geomagnetic storms and making the aurora potentially visible ...