Sun Storm To Cause Massive Auroral Display 20
glengyron writes "SMH reports a major geomagnetic storm will cause a spectacular display of shimmering coloured lights in the night sky of the Southern Hemsiphere. Read more here or check out the press release from the Australian Space Weather Agency (pdf)."
Auroras (Score:4, Informative)
Also a good show in the Northern Hemisphere (Score:4, Informative)
The article says it may go as far south as Oklahoma, but I haven't seen anything yet here in Colorado, although I did see some pretty nifty Aurora Borealis over Boulder, Colorado [komar.org] last year.
Re:Also a good show in the Northern Hemisphere (Score:1)
Re:Also a good show in the Northern Hemisphere (Score:3, Informative)
on a more technical note, austrailia isn't alone in all this crap. As far south as Idaho we can see aurora at the KP index of 9... as of this post, it's at 10 [noaa.gov].
Re:gods fucking damnit. (Score:1)
I'll tell you all how great it was tomorrow...
But that said, this is the kind of news that makes reading slashdot worthwhile. I wouldn't have even known about this otherwise, until it was all over and the pictures were on the 5pm news (which I always miss), or my HF radio stopped working.
Yay!!!
Re:gods fucking damnit. (Score:2)
Re:gods fucking damnit. (Score:1)
Re:gods fucking damnit. (Score:1)
Re:gods fucking damnit. (Score:2)
Re:gods fucking damnit. (Score:2, Informative)
Either sign up on the Aurora Alert mailing list [alaska.edu] or keep an eye on the realtime Kp index [noaa.gov] wherever you are. If it's night where you are now and you're not in the middle of a bloody thunderstorm then gtf out and look for auroras.
And if you're willing to pay $4.95 per month for it you can get the information brough to you by subscribing to the spaceweatherphone [spaceweatherphone.com]
Have fun down under - I heard you guys raise to hell and descend to heaven.
Here are some pics (Score:5, Insightful)
Personally I missed it, but I've seen the phenomenon 100s of times before because I'm initially from the middle/north parts of Sweden. It's really beautiful and surrealistic when it's constantly moving and morphing like an Amiga-demo plasma-effect in the sky.
Saw a neat aurora display on Sunday... (Score:3, Interesting)
Actually, I enjoy talking with people that are clueless about astronomy because they tend to be the ones that show the most interest once they realize just how mysterious the universe is... Go astronomy!
Looked Good in Michigan! (Score:3, Informative)
I've been in southern Michigan for 30+ years. This was the first display I have witnessed. Quite an impressive site (so much so that I woke my wife up and made her watch them too.)
-MS2k
Re:Looked Good in Michigan! (Score:1)
Sunday night, however, I wastched from around 11pm until 2 am, and, being a native of northern MinnesOHta, I am used to some pretty cool displays, but I have never seen anything like what I saw sunday. Nearly the entire sky was lit up green. It got a lot darker around 1, but the patterns started shifting quicker too.
Re:Looked Good in Michigan! (Score:2)
A buddy of mine was at Eastern Michigan's observatory for the night and took a crap load of pictures. This was the only one I could find (not linked in an effort to save what little bandwidth they've got)
http://www.physics.emich.edu/sherzer/AuroraDome
I saw a GLOWING RAINBOW at 2:00 AM (Score:1, Informative)
But then I went outside again after midnight, and it was GLORIOUS. The whole northern half of the sky was lit up and flickering, ligh a neon sign on the fritz. I actually saw a RAINBOW. Around 2:00 AM, for less than a minute, I saw a glowing, red-yellow-green display low in the northeast.
This isn't the first time I've seen the aurora, but