This edition of the northern lights is brought to you by a pair of coronal mass ejections that erupted on New Year's Day.
Auroras may be visible from Alaska to Illinois as an incoming coronal mass ejection could disrupt Earth's magnetic field and ...
A recent coronal mass ejection may disrupt Earth’s geomagnetic field on Friday, potentially making the aurora borealis ...
A NOAA forecast suggest that Northern Lights may be visible in northern U.S. states this weekend during a G2 geomagnetic ...
More than a dozen states across the northern U.S. may have an opportunity to see the aurora borealis on New Year’s Eve, ...
The northern lights could be visible across parts of the US this weekend, especially in northern states like Alaska, ...
People across 18 states could have a shot at catching the lights beginning Friday night, including those in Alaska, North ...
Up to 15 U.S. states could see the aurora on New Year's Eve, according to the Space Weather Prediction Center.
If conditions cooperate, the northern lights could appear late on New Year’s Eve, Wednesday, Dec. 31, and continue into the ...
A G1 geomagnetic storm might occur from December 31 to January 2, increasing the chances of aurora display in certain parts ...
Dennis Lehtonen quit his studies in the university to chase the northern lights full-time. He talks to PEOPLE exclusively ...