Saskatchewan treated to intense display of northern lights
CTV
Those in Saskatchewan gazing at the stars Monday night were treated to a brilliant display of northern lights – as a solar storm continues to bear down on the northern hemisphere.
Those in Saskatchewan gazing at the stars Monday night were treated to a brilliant display of northern lights – as a solar storm continues to bear down on the northern hemisphere.
From Meadow Lake to Ogema – space enthusiasts recorded myriads of colours dancing in the skies.
The National Oceanic Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) reported geomagnetic storm watches on Oct. 3 in the lead up to a pair of coronal mass ejections (CME).
CMEs and solar flares are extremely large explosions on the sun’s photosphere. They occur near sunspots, at the dividing line between areas of oppositely directed magnetic fields.
Plasma interacts with the magnetic field, which sends a burst of plasma up and away from the sun in the form of a flare. Solar flares emit x-rays and magnetic fields which bombard Earth in the form of geomagnetic storms.
The stronger the storms, the more visible and more widespread the Aurora Borealis can be.