Solar Storm Lit Up Parts of Northern US with Auroras

This gorgeous photo was taken in Norway on Oct. 26 by Chris, one of the "<a href="https://www.aurora-addicts.com/northern-lights-holidays">Aurora Addicts</a>." The "addicts" run a company that offers trips to see the northern lights and other sights in A
This gorgeous photo was taken in Norway on Oct. 26 by Chris, one of the "Aurora Addicts." The "addicts" run a company that offers trips to see the northern lights and other sights in Arctic Norway.
(Image credit: Aurora Addicts - www.aurora-addicts.com/tours - facebook.com/AuroraAddicts)

A moderate geomagnetic storm in Earth's magnetic field created some luminous auroras as far south as the northern United States last night.

Space weather refers to the stream of radiation and powerful particles ejected into space from the sun. The Earth is largely protected from space weather by the planet's atmosphere and its magnetic field. When solar material hits the magnetic field and causes a disturbance — or what's known as a geomagnetic storm, according to the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) — it can create the natural light show known as auroras.

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