Second peak of northern lights activity expected

Bill Exley used a 15-second exposure for this picture taken from Clay Street Park.
May 11, 2024

Next wave of charged solar particles expected to arrive Sunday, according to NOAA

By Bert Etling, Ashland.news

It’s coming back. Another wave of charged solar material will sweep into the Earth’s atmosphere, sparking a secondary aurora borealis peak Sunday, May 12, the Space Weather Prediction Center, part of the National Weather Service, announced Saturday.

“Geomagnetic storming of varying intensity will continue overnight,” the notice, issued at 5:30 p.m. Saturday. “By early Sunday and into Sunday night, the next major Coronal Mass Ejections … will begin to slam into the Earth’s magnetic field and reach the outer atmosphere.”

A secondary peak in solar storm activity is likely, according to a notice posted at 5:30 p.m. Saturday by the Space Weather Predication Center. The next peak is expected to hit the Earth’s magnetic field early Sunday and into Sunday night.

The initial wave swept over the Earth late Friday and into Saturday morning, causing auroras over large portions of the U.S., including Southern Oregon, where layers of pale red and green hues, striated with apparent pillars of more intense color, painted the sky from the horizon up into the night sky overnight.

A graph of the Geomagnetic Storms scale from SpaceWeather.com.

Friday’s event rated 5 on the 5-point geomatic story scale, according to SpaceWeather.com. While it agrees with National Oceanographic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA), which includes the National Weather Service and Space Weather Prediction Center, that there will be “a return to extreme (G5) storming,” SpaceWeather.com says the second peak is more likely to arrive Monday, May 13.

Email Ashland.news Executive Editor Bert Etling at betling@ashland.news or call or text him at 541-631-1313.

To see a chart created by the Canadian Space Agency showing which colors associated with which elements at which altitude, click here.

Alex Lockhart shared with Ashland.news this video he recorded of the aurora borealis (northern lights) activity as seen from his back yard near Ashland Middle School on Friday, May 10, 2024. It’s sped up to approximately 60 times actual speed of the period from about 11 p.m. to midnight, when activity was at its peak. Satellites and a plane can also be seen in the night sky, much accelerated.
This photo was taken by Ashland.news photographer Bob Palermini off the deck of his home near the west end of Ashland Street at about 11:30 p.m. Friday.
Additional geomagnetic activity causing auroras over large portions of the U.S. may continue into Monday, according to a post Saturday afternoon by the Space Weather Prediction Center.
Shelley Brown Vasquez took this photo looking north from Indian Memorial Road.
Ольга Шкоруп took this photo from Garfield Park.
Susan Roudebush took this photo.
Lisandra Miranda took this photo at Emigrant Lake near mile marker 6.
Sheri London took this photo.
Shawndra McCurdy took this photo.
Russell Phillips took this photo.
Alex Lockhart took this photo at about 11:15 p.m. Friday from his back yard near Ashland Middle School using the “astrophotograhpy” mode on his Pixel 7.
Chamise Kramer took this photo looking toward Roxy Anne from Phelps Street in Ashland.
Kathy Oleksow Kane took this photo from Mount Ashland Ski Road.
Brittany Dionne Keck took this photo looking northwest from Oak Knoll Golf Course.
Picture of Bert Etling

Bert Etling

Bert Etling is the executive editor of Ashland.news. Email him at betling@ashland.news.

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