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jimhelm 04-13-2013 11:38 AM

Keep Looking UP!
 
Tonight, in New Joisey....


Quote:

Dazzling Northern Lights Anticipated Tonight

April 13, 2013; 6:11 AM

A solar flare that occurred around 2 a.m. Thursday morning may create a spectacular display of northern lights Saturday evening. The midlevel flare had a long duration and was directed at Earth. According to AccuWeather.com Astronomer Hunter Outten, who stated that this flare was "impressive", these are the best conditions for seeing a direct effect on our planet. On the Kp index, the flare has been categorized at 6 to 8. This is a scale for measuring the intensity of a a geomagnetic storm. The 6 to 8 rating means that the effects of the radiation will have a greater reach.

The radiation from such a flare may cause radio wave disturbances to electronics such as cell phones, GPS and radios, causing services to occasionally cut in and out. While traveling slower than was originally anticipated, the flare effects are moving towards Earth at 1000 km per second.

The flare is also expected to cause vibrant northern lights from the Arctic as far south as New York, the Dakotas, Washington and Michigan, with a smaller possibility of it going into Pennsylvania and Iowa, even Kansas. The lights are currently estimated for 8 p.m. EDT Saturday arrival, with a possible deviation of up to seven hours. If the radiation hits much after dark settles on the East Coast the lights may be missed and will instead only be visible for the West.

Solar flares create auroras when radiation from the sun reaches Earth and interacts with charged protons in our atmosphere. The effects are greater at the magnetic poles and weaken as they move south from the Arctic or north of the Antarctic. In the northern hemisphere the results are called the aurora borealis, with the aurora australis being its southern counterpart. The result is a spectacular display of light and color for areas with clear enough views.

Viewing conditions will be best in the mid-Atlantic, specifically for parts of Pennsylvania and the Delmarva. Most of the country will have poor to fair views as a result of cloud cover, with areas further south not experiencing the aurora at all. A pocket of fair conditions sits over parts of Oregon into Washington and southern Idaho. A swath of partly cloudy conditions will also spread over a section of the Ohio Valley for parts of Michigan, Indiana and Illinois. Ohio will experience fair to good viewing conditions. For the rest of the country conditions will be poor.

The northern lights may also be visible for parts of northern Europe, including Scandinavia, most of Russia and the British Isles, and as far south as the northern parts of Germany, Poland, Lithuania, Belarus, Latvia and Estonia. Unfortunately, many of those areas will be experiencing a good deal of cloud coverage.
The southern lights may reach a very small portion of Australia, including Tasmania and the southern coast of Victoria. Most of New Zealand's South Island is in range for the aurora.

View more on information on AccuWeather.com's Astronomy Facebook Page.

http://vortex.accuweather.com/adc200...9_untitled.png

http://vortex.accuweather.com/adc200...31348_page.jpg

xoxoxoBruce 04-13-2013 11:46 AM

Excellent, thanks Jim.

jimhelm 04-13-2013 11:46 AM

Auroral forecast

jimhelm 04-13-2013 11:50 AM

this comes just before the Lyrid Meteor shower begins.

That's set to peak around the 22nd.

Quote:

t is going to be a great time for sky-watchers. Lyrid meteor shower 2013 and aurora borealis forecast due to solar flare will coincide this time

The much awaited “Lyrid Meteor” showers are all set to make their grand debut in the skies of northern hemisphere, this year from April 16 onwards. It’s time for the sky watchers to be all set for the showers, an annual affair, that would end by April 26.

Lyrids, observed from last 2600 years, are the meteor showers that take place for ten days every year from April 16-26. The radiant of the meteor shower is located within the constellation Lyra which is the neighbor to Alpha Lyrae, the brightest star of the constellation. Therefore these showers are also known as Alpha Lyrids and also April Lyrids. The showers that are at their peak on April 22, are caused due to the shedding of particles and dust shed by the cometary tail of Comet Thatcher’, that orbits the sun about every 415 years and last visited our solar system in 1861. It is expected to return in 2276. Every year during this period of the month, the Earth runs into a stream of cosmic debris from the comet which causes the Lyrid meteor shower.

elSicomoro 04-13-2013 12:06 PM

Dude, garbage fires in Jersey aren't the aurora borealis...

monster 04-13-2013 03:57 PM

Michigan! Wheeee! and it's hector's brithday! Thanks, jim

monster 04-13-2013 09:21 PM

:( nothing so far. it's a little overcast

jimhelm 04-13-2013 10:28 PM

Same here.... Bummer

xoxoxoBruce 04-13-2013 10:55 PM

Nothing on Cape Cod either. :(

Sundae 04-14-2013 04:04 AM

Called the Limes - if anyone would get a show, they would.
Pissing down said Mr Limey.

It always seems to happen here too.
Meteor shower? Rain.
Northern Lights? Rain.
Rain? Rain.

orthodoc 04-14-2013 07:24 AM

Rained here too. No lights for us. :(

jimhelm 04-14-2013 08:18 AM

We had clear enough skies.... Just no lights.

Griff 04-14-2013 11:18 AM

Cloudy, got nothing, thanks for the heads up though.

xoxoxoBruce 04-14-2013 09:06 PM

1 Attachment(s)
Last night in Tok Alaska. You can see an animated gif here.


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