'Severe' solar storm hitting Earth could cause Midwest to see northern lights
A "severe" solar storm hit Earth on Sunday according to the NOAA Space Weather Prediction Center, causing parts of the nation to be able to see the aurora borealis.
On X, formerly Twitter, the Prediction Center said that a coronal mass ejection event arrived Sunday and caused a G4 geomagnetic storm. The Center said that the strong geomagnetic storm could continue through the rest of Sunday and into Monday.
The SWPC had warned that the storm could reach up to G3 strength on Saturday.
“The public should not anticipate adverse impacts and no action is necessary, but they should stay properly informed of storm progression by visiting our webpage,” the Prediction Center said, noting that infrastructure operators had been notified.
The 23 March CME arrived at around 24/1411 UTC. Severe (G4) geomagnetic storming has been observed and is expected to continue through the remainder of the 24 March-UTC day and into the first half of 25 March. pic.twitter.com/CDXQtyv4yp
— NOAA Space Weather (@NWSSWPC) March 24, 2024
The Prediction Center predicts that the northern lights possibly could be seen as far south as northern Illinois and central Iowa.
NOAA Auora prediction
Noaa
Embedded content: https://services.swpc.noaa.gov/experimental/images/aurora_dashboard/tonights_static_viewline_forecast.png?time=1711317288000
What is a coronal mass ejection?
NASA describes coronal mass ejections as "huge bubbles of coronal plasma threaded by intense magnetic field lines that are ejected from the Sun over the course of several hours." The space agency says they often look like "huge, twisted rope" and can occur with solar flares, or explosions on the sun's surface.
This article originally appeared on USA TODAY: Solar storm hitting Earth could cause Midwest to see northern lights