EZLorenzImagery, to Seattle
@EZLorenzImagery@socel.net avatar
doomscroller, to Perth
@doomscroller@mastodon.online avatar

May day heat record to tumble in Perth
Perth is about to obliterate its record for the longest run of days above 25°C in May as the city experiences an unusual run of late-season warmth. https://www.weatherzone.com.au/news/may-day-heat-record-to-tumble-in-perth/1889414 #Perth #WAWX #Wx #OzWx

EZLorenzImagery, to Seattle
@EZLorenzImagery@socel.net avatar
jalley, to pnw
@jalley@sfba.social avatar

Absolutely incredible display last night

image/jpeg
image/jpeg

soundstruck, to pnw
@soundstruck@m.ai6yr.org avatar

Just incredible. Still speechless!

Sequim, WA

Dogsincoats, to random
@Dogsincoats@mstdn.social avatar

Just got back to Seattle and am glad I decided to go to Snoqualmie Pass. I'm too tired. So, here is an unedited time-lapse of the Northern Lights dancing overhead.

video/mp4

Jzimbabwe, to Seattle
@Jzimbabwe@toot.pizza avatar

spotting in West

moira, to Seattle
@moira@mastodon.murkworks.net avatar

woah okay not much with the naked eye but the phone is getting some colour

moira,
@moira@mastodon.murkworks.net avatar

due north

not super visible in person, you can kind of see streaks

moira,
@moira@mastodon.murkworks.net avatar

I think it’s getting stronger. Still vague to the naked eye though. basically due west.

moira,
@moira@mastodon.murkworks.net avatar

STRANGE OBJECT IMAGED IN THE IMPERIAL VORTEX

moira,
@moira@mastodon.murkworks.net avatar

okay this flared up and is naked-eye visible though with less colour. directly overhead.

moira,
@moira@mastodon.murkworks.net avatar
sollat, to Cats
@sollat@masto.ai avatar

We’re waiting.

AltText:
A fluffy white cat sitting in a windowsill looking up. It’s just starting to get dark but it’s taking forever.

sollat,
@sollat@masto.ai avatar

So far, I see the moon and stars. There are some wispy clouds out there to remind me that taking pictures of the sky here is a full contact sport.

.

sollat,
@sollat@masto.ai avatar

AH HA! Catbait works again. :blobcatlaugh:

AltText:
Picture out a window facing southeast with a big blob of pink, pink tinted evergreen trees, and clockwise swoopy patterns fading to dull bluish night sky.

weatherbygrant, to random
@weatherbygrant@mastodon.social avatar

Very interesting Special Weather Statement from the National Weather Service Portland.

ingallswx.com, to portland
@ingallswx.com@ingallswx.com avatar

A very large sunspot issued five Earth-directed coronal mass ejections on Thursday, leading the NOAA Space Weather Prediction Center to issue a watch for G4 geomagnetic storm conditions Friday afternoon to Sunday. This is the highest alert category issued by NOAA since 2005.

A G4 storm on NOAA’s scale corresponds to a Kp index value of 8. Under these conditions, the northern lights or aurora borealis could be seen on the northern horizon as far south as Northern California and Alabama. Aurorae may be seen near to directly overhead the Pacific Northwest and Great Lakes with much of Canada (especially Western Canada) likely to experience significant displays.

Having five coronal mass ejections back to back is a remarkably rare event. Readers may remember a double-ejection event in March 2024. Coronal mass ejections are eruptions of material from the Sun, typically originating from sunspots. The sunspot area that generated these ejections is also remarkable – it is estimated to span an area 16 times the diameter of the Earth.

This size puts it on par with estimates of the sunspot area that generated the Carrington Event. While aurorae are typically confined to polar regions, this one in 1859 was strong enough to generate them well into the tropics. Reports of northern lights came in from places like Cuba, Hawaii, and Colombia.

The impeding solar storm is not the same strength as the Carrington Event despite having been spawned by a sunspot area of similar size. The Sun will rotate the current sunspot area to face away from Earth in the coming days.

Coronal mass ejections also create radio blackouts and problems with electrical grids. A G5 storm in 2003 caused power outages in Sweden and damage to electrical infrastructure in South Africa. A large storm in 1989 knocked out power to nearly all of Quebec.

https://ingallswx.files.wordpress.com/2024/05/img_2612-1.png?w=984HRDPS modeled cloud cover for 00:00 PDT Saturday. (WeatherBell)The weather in the Northwestern United States and Western Canada looks ideal for aurora viewing on Friday night. A few scattered high clouds are possible, along with spots of low-level stratus in some coastal areas, but mostly clear skies are forecast. This is thanks to a ridge of high pressure in place over the region.

If you’re in Canada or the northern half of the United States, you can improve your chances of seeing the northern lights Friday night by finding a dark location outside of a city or town with a clear view to the north. Aurora displays are also possible Saturday night.

Note that there is a level of uncertainty with these kinds of forecasts, just like those predicting “normal” weather conditions. Observed Kp numbers aren’t likely to exactly match the NOAA forecast but they should be close. Some uncertainty is also inherent in the timing of the solar storm.

Sunspot frequency varies based on the 11-year long sunspot cycle. Sunspots are the origin of events like this, thus having more sunspots present increases the chances of a geomagnetic storm producing aurora above Earth’s mid-latitudes.

The Sun is currently near the peak of its current cycle. The Space Weather Prediction Center notes that over the course of April 2024 there was an average of 137 sunspots present on the Sun compared to less than 1 for several months during the last minimum in 2019-2020 and 146 in February 2014.

February 2014 represents the peak of the last sunspot cycle. The ongoing maximum is forecast to continue to early 2026 before declining toward the next minimum. While sunspots, geomagnetic storms, and mid-latitude aurora are more common during the peak of the sunspot cycle, occasional storms do strike the Earth around the minimum.

The featured image is of an aurora display in Estonia in 2022. (Maxim Bilovitskiy/Wikimedia)

https://ingallswx.com/2024/05/09/large-solar-storm-to-impact-earth-this-weekend-aurorae-possible-in-pacific-northwest/

image/png

moira, to Seattle
@moira@mastodon.murkworks.net avatar

HEY LOOK EAST RIGHT NOW

moira,
@moira@mastodon.murkworks.net avatar
moira,
@moira@mastodon.murkworks.net avatar
moira,
@moira@mastodon.murkworks.net avatar

@bnys i say again

DANG

moira,
@moira@mastodon.murkworks.net avatar

@xgranade Remember the triple back in 2012? I took one of the popular photos. Completely crashed my site from traffic xD

https://solarbird.net/blog/2012/11/24/go-home-rainbow/

moira, to Seattle
@moira@mastodon.murkworks.net avatar

loud on the roof

jalley, to pnw
@jalley@sfba.social avatar

Friday afternoon

jalley, to pnw
@jalley@sfba.social avatar

Friday

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