The northern lights and their spectacular red glow were seen across the southern U.S. on Friday, being spotted as far down as Florida.
Northern lights, or aurora borealis, of any color are rarely seen so far south, with this occurrence being a result of a severe Category G4 geomagnetic storm in our atmosphere. The storm is a result of a coronal mass ejection—a release of a magnetic field and its plasma—from the sun. Bill Williams, an astrophotographer, sent his picture of the red aurora taken in Florida to Spaceweather.com, a news website on the Sun-Earth environment. He wrote:"'What in the world happened to our western horizon the night of March 23-24," I queried the astromen of Chiefland Astro Village??!!"
Stock image of red northern lights over the wilderness. Red lights were seen as far south as Florida on March 24."Normally, we have a very dark western horizon as we are peering over the Suwannee River Basin and the Gulf of Mexico ... We concluded that, because there were no rocket launches or wildfires, it was mostThe mystery was solved the next day as Spaceweather.com described a 'severe geomagnetic storm' well-seen in the U.S. As far as I know, at 29.
The Chiefland Astronomy Village caught the edge of March 24th's aurora, and it's further into Florida than I expected. The last time this happened the space weather was much, much worse, making this a major sign of Earth's increasing vulnerability to the Sun's activity.
Source: Entertainment Trends (entertainmenttrends.net)
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