Auroras could paint Earth's skies again in early June. Here are the key nights to watch for. (2024)

Auroras could paint Earth's skies again in early June. Here are the key nights to watch for. (1)

If you want to glimpse the northern lights from below the Arctic Circle, be ready to drive to dark skies the first week of June.

Earth's most powerful geomagnetic storm in more than two decades happened between May 10 and May 12, painting the skies with colorful auroras as far south as Florida and Mexico in an ultra-rare occurrence.

This was the result of at least five solar storms that hit Earth simultaneously, all originating from a massive sunspot known as active region 3664 (also called AR3664 and AR13664), a dark patch on the sun more than 15 times wider than Earth. The barrage of charged particles collided with Earth's magnetosphere, which funneled them along magnetic field lines toward the poles, generating vibrant auroras along the way.

Crucially, the fallout from the solar storms arrived a few nights after May's new moon, when the night sky was free from moonlight — making even faint auroras easier to see.

Because the sun rotates on its axis once every 27 days, the sunspot disappeared from view around a week later, but it didn't stop producing solar flares. On May 20, it emitted a solar flare rated as X12, the strongest since September 2017. It was observed by the European Space Agency's Solar Orbiter spacecraft.

AR3664/AR13664 is now becoming visible again as the sun rotates — and it will be Earth-facing once again during the new moon on June 6.

"It will align nicely," Ryan French, a solar physicist at the National Solar Observatory (NSO) in Boulder, Colorado, told Live Science. "As soon as the sunspot starts to appear, we will enter the window of opportunity [for solar flares]."

Related: 32 stunning photos of auroras seen from space

The monster sunspot will reappear in late May/early June, but when the sunspot reaches just to the right of the center of the sun, from our perspective, the sun-Earth system will be most connected. That's when our planet is most likely to be hit by solar weather, potentially resulting in another display of auroras at low latitudes.

"That's exactly where it produced all of those large flares," said French. "But in theory, if you had a large enough eruption, even if it's just to the left of the sun's center, we could still get the edge of that impact."

related stories

Solar storm from 1977 reveals how unprepared we are for the next 'big one'

Could a solar storm ever destroy Earth?

15 signs the sun is gearing up for its explosive peak — the solar maximum

June 6's new moon rises exactly 27 days after May 10, so be on alert a few nights before and after that date — just in case there's a repeat of last month's extreme geomagnetic activity. If auroras are visible near you, you'll need to get far from obscuring clouds and city lights to be able to see them.

Even after June's new moon, there may still be other chances to catch the aurora near you this year. Sunspots appear in greater frequency — and trigger more powerful solar flares — during the peak of the sun's 11-year activity cycle, known as the solar maximum. Scientists suspect that the current cycle's maximum may already be underway, hitting us sooner and harder than previously estimated. But we won't be able to determine the maximum's precise timing until after it ends, and solar activity finally quiets down again.

Update: This article was updated on May 29 to specify where to look for the sunspot after it reappears. It will be just to the right of the sun's center.

Jamie Carter

Live Science contributor

Jamie Carter is a freelance journalist and regular Live Science contributor based in Cardiff, U.K. He is the author of A Stargazing Program For Beginners and lectures on astronomy and the natural world. Jamie regularly writes for Space.com, TechRadar.com, Forbes Science, BBC Wildlife magazine and Scientific American, and many others. He edits WhenIsTheNextEclipse.com.

More about space

What could aliens look like?James Webb telescope finds carbon at the dawn of the universe, challenging our understanding of when life could have emerged

Latest

Epidurals may lower risk of complications after birth, study hints
See more latest►

Most Popular
Explosive 'devil comet' grows seemingly impossible 2nd tail after close flyby of Earth — but it's not what it seems
New contest lets you name Earth's 1st 'quasi-moon' for free. Here's how to enter.
Shigir Idol: World's oldest wood sculpture has mysterious carved faces and once stood 17 feet tall
Bear vs tiger: Watch 2 of nature's heavyweights face off in the wild in India
Arctic 'zombie fires' rising from the dead could unleash vicious cycle of warming
Vivid nightmares precede lupus diagnosis by over a year in some patients
Quantum internet breakthrough after 'quantum data' transmitted through standard fiber optic cable for 1st time
Blood Falls: Antarctica's crimson waterfall forged from an ancient hidden heart
Giant viruses discovered living in Greenland's dark ice and red snow
'Jackpot' of 2,000 early-medieval coins discovered by hiker in Czech Republic
Restless legs syndrome tied to 140 'hotspots' in the genome
Auroras could paint Earth's skies again in early June. Here are the key nights to watch for. (2024)

References

Top Articles
Latest Posts
Article information

Author: Maia Crooks Jr

Last Updated:

Views: 6184

Rating: 4.2 / 5 (63 voted)

Reviews: 86% of readers found this page helpful

Author information

Name: Maia Crooks Jr

Birthday: 1997-09-21

Address: 93119 Joseph Street, Peggyfurt, NC 11582

Phone: +2983088926881

Job: Principal Design Liaison

Hobby: Web surfing, Skiing, role-playing games, Sketching, Polo, Sewing, Genealogy

Introduction: My name is Maia Crooks Jr, I am a homely, joyous, shiny, successful, hilarious, thoughtful, joyous person who loves writing and wants to share my knowledge and understanding with you.