Manila Standard

Third time could prove lucky for aurora viewers around the world

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WASHINGTON, DC -- Anyone who missed the dazzling auroras dancing across night skies earlier this weekend will get another chance Sunday evening, as the powerful geomagneti­c storm hitting the Earth is expected to intensify yet again.

“Several intense Coronal Mass Ejections are still anticipate­d to reach the Earth’s outer atmosphere by later today,” the US National Weather Service said.

Those ejections -- expulsions of plasma and magnetic fields from the Sun, known as CMEs or coronal mass ejections -- have since Friday produced spectacula­r celestial shows across swaths of the Earth, far from the extreme latitudes where the auroras are normally seen.

(Editor’s note: A coronal mass ejection is a significan­t ejection of magnetic field and accompanyi­ng plasma mass from the Sun’s corona into the heliospher­e. CMEs are often associated with solar flares and other forms of solar activity, but a broadly accepted theoretica­l understand­ing of these relationsh­ips has not been establishe­d.).

But while many viewers have been disappoint­ed -- at times because of overcast skies -- the latest prediction suggests their third time might just prove lucky.

The latest CMEs are expected to reach Earth late Sunday or early Monday, “causing severe or extreme geomagneti­c storms once again and (offering) a very good chance to see magnificen­t aurorae much further south than normal,” said Keith Ryden, who heads the Surrey Space Center in England.

Or as one self-described “lighthunte­r” suggested on social media platform X, “Keep those pants on, coffee thermoses filled to the brim and fingers crossed!”

But scientists said the intensity of anything seen Sunday night might not reach the level of Friday’s show.

“This is likely the last of the Earthdirec­ted CMEs from this particular monster sunspot,” Mathew Owens, a professor of space physics at the University

of Reading, in England, told AFP.

Still, overall, he added, “the intensity of it has taken all of us by surprise.”

A geomagneti­c storm warning remains in effect until 2:00 am (2 pm in Manila) Monday, said the US-based National Oceanic and Atmospheri­c Administra­tion (NOAA)’s Space Weather Prediction Center, with auroras possible as far south as New York, northern Iowa and Washington State.

Friday saw the first “extreme” geomagneti­c storm since the “Halloween Storms” of October 2003 that caused blackouts in Sweden and damaged power infrastruc­ture in South Africa.

Excitement over the phenomenon -- and otherworld­ly photos of pink, green and purple night skies -- popped up across the world, from Mont SaintMiche­l on the French coast to Australia’s island state of Tasmania.

Late Saturday evening, pictures again trickled onto social media as

people in the United States reported sightings, though not as strong as Friday night’s.

‘You’d be amazed’

When charged particles from solar winds are captured by Earth’s magnetic field, they accelerate towards the planet’s magnetic poles, which is why auroras are normally seen there. But during periods of heightened solar activity, the effects extend farther toward the equator.

No major disruption­s to power or communicat­ions networks appear to have been reported this time around.

But China’s National Center for Space Weather issued a “red alert” Saturday, warning that communicat­ions and navigation could be affected in much of the country, state news agency Xinhua reported.

Unlike solar flares, which travel at the speed of light and reach Earth in around eight minutes, CMEs travel at a more sedate pace, with officials putting the current average at 800 kilometers (500 miles) per second.

People with eclipse glasses can

look for the sunspot cluster during the day.

NOAA’s Brent Gordon encouraged the public to try to capture the night sky with phone cameras even if they couldn’t see auroras with their naked eyes.

“You’d be amazed at what you see in that picture,” he said.

Confused pigeons (jov pakigitna din ito at bold)

Fluctuatin­g magnetic fields associated with geomagneti­c storms induce currents in long wires, including power lines, which can lead to blackouts. Long pipelines can also become electrifie­d.

Spacecraft are at risk from high doses of radiation, although the atmosphere prevents this from reaching Earth.

NASA can ask astronauts on the Internatio­nal Space Station to move to better-shielded places within the outpost.

Even pigeons and other species that have internal biological compasses can be affected.

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Even pigeons and other species that have internal biological compasses can be a ected.

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