Coronal mass ejections, or CMEs, can cause both the northern lights and widespread telecommunications disruptions. But could a powerful CME end the human race?
Auroras: On a brighter note, the geomagnetic storm might produce spectacular auroras, probably visible in the Southern United ...
Coronal mass ejection from the sun at the same time as a recent X4.5 solar flare is about to collide with the Earth.
An intense solar flare and a coronal mass ejection could mean Northern Lights early this week as far south as Pennsylvania.
Scientists just observed a powerful solar storm that could carry the northern lights over the lower 48 in the near future.
The northern lights visible across the United States after a solar flare were the most widespread and intense aurora show ...
Charged particles crashing into Earth are expected to create strong solar storm conditions early Monday morning, prompting a ...
Conditions sparked by the CMEs became so strong Monday night that the SWPC issued a “severe geomagnetic storm alert” around ...
The Northern Lights may be seen Monday, Sept. 16 as far south as California, Missouri and Colorado after major solar activity ...
The strongest impacts are expected to arrive on Tuesday, which could produce aurora lights father away from Earth’s poles, ...
The first “severe” storm in decades is approaching this weekend with a fantastic light show expected to grace the skies of the US.
A CME or coronal mass ejection - an eruption of material from the surface of the sun - happened on Sunday and should reach ...