Quantcast
Channel: Aurora Headlines on One News Page [United States]
Viewing all 17855 articles
Browse latest View live

'Northern Lights' May Be Visible in Saturday Evening Sky Over New Jersey

$
0
0
'Northern Lights' May Be Visible in Saturday Evening Sky Over New Jersey Patch Berkeley, NJ --

The chance to marvel at streams of color in the sky should be possible Saturday evening over New Jersey. A solar flare may create a Northern Lights display Saturday, according to a report by Accuweather.

Accuweather's astronomy report includes a graphic of the United States showing that the occurence of the Northern Lights, also called an aurora, could best be visible over New Jersey and DelMarva.

A cloudless Saturday sky over New Jersey would improve viewing conditions, where as the rest of the nation is predicted to have cloudy skies impacting the view.

"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 southeastern Oregon and the southwest corner of 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," reported Accuweather.

For more about aurora astronomy, view Accuweather's report here. Reported by Patch 3 hours ago.

'Northern Lights' May Be Visible in Ross and West View Saturday, Sunday Evening

$
0
0
'Northern Lights' May Be Visible in Ross and West View Saturday, Sunday Evening Patch North Hills, PA --

A solar flare could create a Northern Lights display Saturday and Sunday evening over parts the mid-Atlantic, including the Pittsburgh area, according to a report by Accuweather.

Accuweather's astronomy report includes a graphic of the United States showing that the occurrence of the Northern Lights, also called an aurora, could best be visible over parts of the mid-Atlantic, including parts of southwestern Pennsylvania.

The Pittsburgh area is usually too far south to view the Northern Lights, but it is occasionally visible during instances of coronal mass ejections, like the one Accuweather reports occurred Thursday. 

Night-time light pollution can also lower visibility the experts at Accuweather recommend finding an area with an unobstructed view of the northern sky, far away from bright lights to view the aurora. Of course, the skies must be clear and right now the national weather service in Pittsburgh  is predicting mostly cloudy skies Saturday, but clearing by early Sunday. 

According to Accuweather:



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 southeastern Oregon and the southwest corner of 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.



For more about aurora astronomy, view Accuweather's report here.

*Follow us on Twitter | Like us on Facebook *

*Check out some of today's ** other top stories here.* Reported by Patch 3 hours ago.

Aurora Borealis Tonight Over Much of Northern US

$
0
0
Aurora Borealis tonight: Long Island and parts of the northeastern United States could get a rare glimpse of the Aurora Borealis on Saturday night.

The post Aurora Borealis Tonight Over Much of Northern US appeared first on The Epoch Times. Reported by Epoch Times 2 hours ago.

Aurora Borealis Expected to be Visible on Long Island Saturday Night

$
0
0
Aurora Borealis Expected to be Visible on Long Island Saturday Night Patch Kings Park, NY --

The shimmering curtain of light known as the aurora borealis is expected to be visible to much of Long Island and several other Northern states tonight, according to forecasts.

As of 11 a.m. Saturday, the Northern Lights, as they're also known, are expected to appear beginning around 8 p.m. Eastern time, although the exact time may change due to shifting conditions. There’s also a possibility the aurora will not be visible from this area at all.

A Twitter feed has been created to provide updates throughout the day Saturday.

The phenomenon is caused when particles discharged by the sun during a solar flare strike our atmosphere, with larger flares causing larger auroral displays. Usually, the aurora can only be seen at or near the North Pole, but a solar flare that occurred early Thursday morning was large enough to touch off a display that will be seen much farther south than normal.

The flare may also affect some electronic equipment, like cell phones and GPS systems. Radio and television trasmissions may also be briefly disrupted.

Viewing conditions in Long Island are expected to be “good.” The display is best viewed in the dark, far from other, man-made sources of light. Reported by Patch 14 minutes ago.

Aurora Borealis tonight? Dazzling northern lights forecast

$
0
0
Aurora Borealis tonight? Yes, New York, Pennsylvania, and parts of the US Midwest could see a rare spectacular aurora borealis light show tonight, based on the forecasts. Reported by Christian Science Monitor 33 seconds ago.

Aurora Borealis: 'Northern Lights' Show May be Opening Act for Lyrid Meteor Shower

$
0
0
Aurora Borealis: 'Northern Lights' Show May be Opening Act for Lyrid Meteor Shower Patch Ashburn, VA --

A solar flare directed at Earth may provide a "spectacular" display of Northern Lights Saturday evening, and prime viewing could be in the skies over Nothern Virginia.

The aurora borealis, more commonly known as the Northern Lights, can be seen as colorful wisps in the skies, most often greens with areas of pinks, blues and yellows.

For a preview, you can look at these pictures of he Northern Lights or this video of the Northern Lights.

A Twitter feed has been created to provide updates throughout the day Saturday.

AccuWeather.com reports that the flare is expected to cause vibrant northern lights from the Arctic as far south as Washington and had been roughly estimated for 8 p.m. EDT Saturday arrival -- but it looks like they could appear a couple of hours late.

Of course, the darker area you're in, the more spectacular the show. And the weather forecast for the Northern Lights seems to be cooperating, with mostly clear skies ahead of us.

The appearance by the Northern Lights comes just in advance of the Lyrid meteor shower which peaks April 22. Reported by Patch 19 hours ago.

Parts of U.S. forecast to catch glimpse of Aurora Borealis

$
0
0
Aurora Borealis tonight? Dazzling northern lights forecast (via The Christian Science Monitor) Accuweather is forecasting that the northern lights, aka, the aurora borealis, will be visible in parts of the United States tonight.(Accuweather.com) You don’t have to be in chilly Fairbanks, Alaska or Yellowknife, Canada, to see the Aurora Borealis tonight. Seattle, New York, Pittsburgh, and Washington…   [Image by Flickr user Tor Even Mathisen via Creative Commons] Reported by Raw Story 5 hours ago.

Aurora Borealis May Be Visible in Maryland Saturday, Sunday

$
0
0
Aurora Borealis May Be Visible in Maryland Saturday, Sunday Patch Elkridge, MD --

A solar flare could create a Northern Lights display Saturday and Sunday evening over parts the mid-Atlantic, including Maryland, Accuweather reports.

Accuweather's astronomy report includes a graphic of the United States showing that the occurence of the Northern Lights, also called aurora borealis, could best be visible over parts of the mid-Atlantic, including parts of Maryland.

According to the Maryland Geological Survey (MSG), Maryland is usually too far south to view the Northern Lights, but it is occasionally visible during coronal mass ejections -- solar flares --  such as the one Accuweather reports occurred Thursday. 

Night-time light pollution can also lower visibility in cities and suburbs with lights that tend to wash out the night sky, so MGS recommends finding an area with an unobstructed view of the northern sky, far away from bright lights to view the aurora. A cloudless Saturday sky over Maryland could improve viewing conditions, where as the rest of the nation is predicted to have cloudy skies impacting the view.

According to Accuweather:

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 southeastern Oregon and the southwest corner of 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.

For more about aurora astronomy, view Accuweather's report here. Reported by Patch 18 hours ago.

One man wounded in incident in Aurora

$
0
0
 Aurora police are investigating a shooting Saturday afternoon in the 2200 block of North Emporia Street. Reported by Denver Post 3 days ago.

Aurora, Colorado Havana Business Improvement District to Host 5th Annual Earth Day Electronics Recycling & Doc Shredding Event

$
0
0
Havana Street, a destination shopping in Aurora, Colorado, hosts its fifth annual free Earth Day electronics recycling & document shredding event Saturday, April 20, 2013.

Aurora, CO (PRWEB) April 15, 2013

Earth Day Shopping in Aurora, Colorado, will take a greener shade on Saturday, April 20, 2013, as the Havana Business Improvement District (BID), dba On Havana Street, hosts its 5th Annual free Earth Day Electronics Recycling & Doc Shredding Event.

“Last year, we recycled 40,500 pounds, filling two 53-foot semi trailers with electronics and we shredded and recycled over 28,000 pounds of paper documents,” said Executive Director Gayle Jetchick. “The Techno Rescue Green Team and Cornerstone Records Management Company provide outstanding professional support for this event and the Aurora, Colorado community.”

Attendees can watch their documents get shredded and can receive an official certificate that the documents have been destroyed. All electronics are safely recycled within the United States. Members of the Graebel Moving Company Sustainability Committee will volunteer their time to facilitate event logistics.

The event is from noon to 3:00 PM in front of Bicycle Village at the Havana Exchange Shopping Center, 2892 South Havana Street, Aurora, Colorado, 80014, just south of Yale on the east side of Havana Street. The radio sponsor for the event is 107.1 Jack FM.

Electronic items that can be accepted include but are not limited to: PCs, CPUs, towers, laptops, notebooks, cell phones, office phones, pagers, monitors, keyboards, printers, copiers, faxes, mice, wires, cables, cords, compact fluorescent bulbs, clothing, textiles, and TV sets.

“Recycling these items clears clutter from homes, businesses and landfills and prevents identity theft,” said Jetchick. “And while there’s no cost and no limit to the amount of electronics and documents one can recycle or shred, we ask everyone to be considerate of others.”

Items that will not be accepted include old paint, tires or other hazardous materials. Aurora residents can contact the City of Aurora at 303-739-7000 to ask about the city's hazardous waste recycling options.

Spring cleaning continues On Havana Street May 4 when the Havana BID hosts its Annual Community Rose Garden Clean-up and Pruning Demonstration at The Gardens on Havana. Participants will learn proper rose pruning from experts and be treated to lunch and receive seeds to get their own flower and vegetable gardens started.

“These are wonderful examples of a coming together to make our community more beautiful,” said Jetchick. “And we hope that after people get rid of their old stuff, they’ll do some Earth Day shopping in Aurora!”

About Havana Business Improvement District
The Havana Business Improvement District (BID) dba On Havana Street is a special district in Colorado created in 2007 by business and neighborhood leaders and Aurora city staff working together to build a stronger, better community. The District makes a difference by focusing on unique, culturally diverse events and fun new things to do and working to keep the area clean, safe and beautiful. For more information please contact Gayle Jetchick, Executive Director info (at) OnHavanaStreet (dot) com, (303) 360-7505. Reported by PRWeb 1 day ago.

NY Times Takes 4 Pulitzers, Denver Post Wins for Coverage of Aurora Shooting

$
0
0
The New York Times lapped the field on Monday, taking home four Pulitzer Prizes for its reporting on Walmart, Apple, China and a tragic skiing accident. Only one other paper, the Minneapolis Star-Tribune, took home more than one award -- it won for local reporting and Editorial Cartooning.

The staff of the Denver Post won for its breaking news coverage of the movie theater shooting in Aurora, Colo.

Related Articles: 
'Outraged' Apple CEO Deems N.Y. Times' Exposé 'Offensive'
James Holmes' Psychiatrist Sued by Widow of Aurora Shooting Victim

read more Reported by The Wrap 20 hours ago.

Aurora Borealis: 'Northern Lights' Show May be Opening Act for Lyrid Meteor Shower

$
0
0
Aurora Borealis: 'Northern Lights' Show May be Opening Act for Lyrid Meteor Shower Patch Falls Church, VA --

A solar flare directed at Earth may provide a "spectacular" display of Northern Lights Saturday evening, and prime viewing could be in the skies over Nothern Virginia.

The aurora borealis, more commonly known as the Northern Lights, can be seen as colorful wisps in the skies, most often greens with areas of pinks, blues and yellows.

For a preview, you can look at these pictures of he Northern Lights or this video of the Northern Lights.

A Twitter feed has been created to provide updates throughout the day Saturday.

AccuWeather.com reports that the flare is expected to cause vibrant northern lights from the Arctic as far south as Washington and had been roughly estimated for 8 p.m. EDT Saturday arrival -- but it looks like they could appear a couple of hours late.

Of course, the darker area you're in, the more spectacular the show. And the weather forecast for the Northern Lights seems to be cooperating, with mostly clear skies ahead of us.

The appearance by the Northern Lights comes just in advance of the Lyrid meteor shower which peaks April 22. Reported by Patch 4 days ago.

WATCH: Aurora Borealis Like You've Never Seen One Before

$
0
0
Lots of people dream of seeing an aurora borealis, but few of us live near the Earth's poles -- where the celestial spectacle is most intense. But now, thanks to Swedish photographer Göran Strand, you can experience an aurora in a way Mother Nature could never show you.

Auroras occur when energetic particles ejected from the sun hit Earth's magnetosphere, the region around the planet where its magnetic field is present. The particles interact with oxygen and nitrogen molecules, triggering the release of photons that can be seen from the ground.

Strand recently compiled four hours of time-lapse photos -- that's 30 gigabytes of data -- taken near the small town of Östersund, in northern Sweden, during the coronal mass ejection that struck Earth on March 17. The fruit of his labor is a two-minute, interactive, 360-degree panorama.

Strand used a fish-eye lens to capture nearly 2,500 photos of the aurora in its entirety, according to PetaPixel. Then he used software to virtually project the images onto the interior of a dome, which the viewer can twist and turn and zoom in or out. The project also lets the viewer switch perspective -- even allowing the aurora to be viewed from above.

Strand explains in a blog post that it took "several hours of post processing and programming" before he finally captured the awe-inspiring auroras from that night.

"My goal with my photography is to open people's eyes to the beauty of the night and auroras are one of the most impressive things you can see," he told The Huffington Post in an email. "Unfortunately most people never get a chance to see an aurora in reality so I wanted to show people how it would look like while actually standing there."

Click on the interactive media, above, to play with Strand's creation. Watch a normal time-lapse video of his fish-eye photos, below: Reported by Huffington Post 5 hours ago.

Aurora Borealis: 'Northern Lights' Show May be Opening Act for Lyrid Meteor Shower

$
0
0
Aurora Borealis: 'Northern Lights' Show May be Opening Act for Lyrid Meteor Shower Patch Ashburn, VA --

A solar flare directed at Earth may provide a "spectacular" display of Northern Lights Saturday evening, and prime viewing could be in the skies over Nothern Virginia.

The aurora borealis, more commonly known as the Northern Lights, can be seen as colorful wisps in the skies, most often greens with areas of pinks, blues and yellows.

For a preview, you can look at these pictures of he Northern Lights or this video of the Northern Lights.

A Twitter feed has been created to provide updates throughout the day Saturday.

AccuWeather.com reports that the flare is expected to cause vibrant northern lights from the Arctic as far south as Washington and had been roughly estimated for 8 p.m. EDT Saturday arrival -- but it looks like they could appear a couple of hours late.

Of course, the darker area you're in, the more spectacular the show. And the weather forecast for the Northern Lights seems to be cooperating, with mostly clear skies ahead of us.

The appearance by the Northern Lights comes just in advance of the Lyrid meteor shower which peaks April 22. Reported by Patch 5 days ago.

Aurora shooting victim remembered by family as kind, loving

$
0
0
 The family of Christopher Bryant Jr. expressed shock at learning he had been shot outside an Aurora sports bar early Saturday. Reported by Denver Post 5 days ago.

Aurora Illuminates Sky Near Tromsø, Norway

$
0
0
*ESA*

These colorful displays are produced when electrically charged particles traveling from the Sun in the solar wind are channeled along Earth’s magnetic field lines and strike atoms high in the atmosphere. Collisions with oxygen atoms typically generate green aurora, as seen here.

The link between auroras and solar activity has been apparent for centuries, but only with the aid of satellites can scientists begin to decipher the physical mechanisms causing this spectacular phenomenon.

ESA’s Cluster quartet of satellites fly in formation around Earth, passing through its magnetic environment to explore the connection between the Sun and our home planet.

In a new study, Cluster has investigated violent magnetic events called substorms, which result from variations in the stream of charged particles emitted in the solar wind colliding with Earth’s magnetic shield – the magnetosphere.

During a substorm, the tail of Earth’s magnetosphere is compressed and blows powerful streams of high-energy plasma towards the planet at speeds that may reach a few thousand kilometers per second. This allows plasma particles to infiltrate the upper layer of Earth’s atmosphere to produce auroras.

Known as ‘bursty bulk flows’, they are short-lived, lasting typically only 10–20 minutes. The new study finds that, despite their brevity, these flows can carry a much more significant amount of energy than previously thought – around a third of the total energy that eventually reaches Earth during an auroral display.

Previous studies considered their contribution to the total energy transferred in a substorm to be marginal, adding up to only 5%.

The new findings suggest that the importance of major phenomena like bursty bulk flows has previously been underestimated, and could provide new insight into the effects of space weather on Earth.

ESA's Swarm mission, planned for launch in June 2013, is set to provide new details of the complexities of Earth's magnetic field and its connection to the Sun.

---

On The Net:




· ESA Reported by redOrbit 4 days ago.

The Denver Post staff wins Pulitzer Prize for Aurora theater shooting coverage

$
0
0
The Denver Post staff has won the 2013 Pulitzer Prize for Breaking News Reporting for its coverage of the Aurora theater shooting. Reported by Denver Post 4 days ago.

Tracking Aurora theater shooting records an "unprecedented" effort

$
0
0
Police have taken "unprecedented" steps to keep track of the massive amount of reports and evidence for the Century Aurora 16 movie theater shootings, prosecutors say in a new court document. Reported by Denver Post 3 days ago.

Aurora Rise officially founded, will appear at Denver Comic Con

$
0
0
A non-profit group originally started as a one-time event to help victims of the Aurora movie theater shootings will be appearing at Denver Comic Con this spring. Reported by Denver Post 3 days ago.

Judge dismisses negligence claims in suit by Aurora theater victims

$
0
0
A federal judge has dismissed negligence claims in lawsuits brought by survivors of the Aurora theater shooting, while allowing wrongful death and another claim to go forward. Reported by Denver Post 2 days ago.
Viewing all 17855 articles
Browse latest View live




Latest Images