Quizzes & Puzzles2 mins ago
Northern LIghts tonight
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Can anyone tell me if there is a time window to try to see the northern lights tonight?
Thanks
jo
Thanks
jo
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For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.not good conditions tonight, you might stand a better chance tomorrow evening but it really depends where you are.
recent sitings in northern england and scotland occured anywhere between 8pm and midnight. so if you are going looking, be prepared to spend a long night waiting. but if it happens, its worth the wait.
recent sitings in northern england and scotland occured anywhere between 8pm and midnight. so if you are going looking, be prepared to spend a long night waiting. but if it happens, its worth the wait.
This is how to make your own detector from a pop bottle! http://aurorawatch.lancs.ac.uk/detectors/
Look here for some info
http://spaceweather.com/
http://spaceweather.com/
please if anyone is on tomorrow evening and has information on the times of when it could be happening please could you post, wendilla I know you do the space station posts and have always watched them and tell others from the information you give, a big thank you for that so if you can help or anyone else can that would be great.
Hi josephine there are no telling what time you will just have to hope for clear skies . No sightings of evening SS for a few weeks as it is early morning sightings. If you are about on Thursday it passes over at 6 43 am and you could also be lucky to see the Progress suppy ship at 7 06 AM for 4 mins. Then on Friday the ISS at 6 40 am WITH THE PROGRESS before at 6 40 AM.
SUBSIDING STORM: A geomagnetic storm caused by Monday's M9-class solar flare and Tuesday's CME impact is over. The aurora watch is cancelled for all but the highest latitudes around the Arctic Circle.
STORM RECAP: As expected, a CME hit Earth's magnetic field on Jan. 24th at approximately 1500 UT (10 am EST). The impact produced a G1-class geomagnetic storm and bright auroras around the Arctic Circle.
Go to spaceweatrher.com for the full story.
STORM RECAP: As expected, a CME hit Earth's magnetic field on Jan. 24th at approximately 1500 UT (10 am EST). The impact produced a G1-class geomagnetic storm and bright auroras around the Arctic Circle.
Go to spaceweatrher.com for the full story.