The U.S. saw vivid northern lights
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The Aurora Borealis put on an impressive showing Tuesday night, and there’s potential for it to dance in the sky again Wednesday. kP indices peaked near 9 p.m. on Nov. 11, allowing for the Northern Lights to be viewable as far south as Alabama, Georgia and Florida.
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The Northern Lights danced across KELOLAND Tuesday night with vibrant colors throughout the sky. The lights are expected to return Wednesday night. “Most of
ABC7 New York on MSN
Northern lights possible again over Tri-State after solar storm brings colorful display
[Northern Lights]: Due to the ongoing geomagnetic storm, many are seeing the northern lights across the U.S. There has been some brief clearing across portions of the area, enough that we were able to capture the northern lights here on eastern Long Island. Have you seen it? pic.twitter.com/QR58Ihkg5V
States as far south as Florida got to see the stunning spectacle of the northern lights. Photos show how the view varied by state.
For two nights, dazzling auroras delighted sky-gazers in unexpected places, including in the US as far south as Florida. The cause: dual solar storms unleashed by the sun reaching Earth. A severe storm was initially predicted for Thursday as well,
The Northern lights, aka aurora borealis, were visible across Denver and Colorado on Tuesday night due to a severe geomagnetic storm that lit up the skies. Pink and red colored northern lights are caused by nitrogen molecules interacting with charged particles at altitudes of between 200-300 kilometers above Earth’s surface.