Colorful red and green rays, including a tall spike at center, stretch to around 50° altitude in the northern sky during the G1 (minor) geomagnetic storm that occurred Sunday morning, August 10-12, 2024. This and all other aurora images in this post were taken at Voyageurs National Park on Lake Kabetogama in northern Minnesota.
Bob King

On Sunday night, August 11-12, the annual Perseid blast will crest to a peak. Dozens of meteors will flash across the sky per hour especially after midnight, when the crescent Moon sets and the shower’s streaming point climbs high in the northeastern sky. That’s not all. In what could be a spectacular two-fer, there’s an excellent possibility that roughly the northern third of the U.S. will also experience a G2 geomagnetic storm with aurora visible as far south as New York, Idaho and northern Iowa. Aurora and Perseids at the same time? Now that would be exciting!

Last night, the NOAA spaceweather forecast called for a similar moderate storm. At the time I was attending the annual Voyageurs Star Party at Voyageurs National Park near International Falls, Minnesota. Voyageurs received Dark Sky Park certification in 2020. Its pristine skies and location near the Canadian border make it one of the premier aurora-watching locations in the country.

Aurora and Perseid meteor
That thin scratch above and slightly right of center is the only Perseid I captured on August 10-11. It was made when the aurora’s discrete forms dissolved into “mush” or diffuse aurora. In the early morning hours the lights regrouped and became much more dynamic. For more about the aurora, check out S&T’s How to See the Aurora.
Bob King

As per forecast, the aurora first became visible at nightfall but remained fainter than expected and hovered low in the northern sky — until 11:30-midnight. All at once, the humdrum green arc thickened, brightened and grew faint, feather-like rays. They appeared pale white with the naked eye — as does so much of the aurora unless the storm intensifies — but glowed a luscious red in time-exposures made with the camera. After a half-hour of slow-dancing the lights reverted to featureless mush. Was the show over? Not by a long shot.

Aurora with Jupiter and Mars
Seeing Jupiter paired with Mars reflecting in the lake with the aurora off to one side caught everyone’s attention. The Pleiades and Hyades also joined the scene.
Bob King

We waited and waited some more. Happily, around 1 a.m. the sky busted open. A reenergized green arc splintered into tall green and red rays so intense the colors were immediately obvious to the eye. As if on cue, Jupiter and Mars rose together and added a double-dash of beauty to the scene. Not to forget the Perseids. While we saw them zip past all night, their numbers increasing with each passing hour. Had I watched alone, I don’t think I would have been able to keep track of such a busy sky. But with a half-dozen or so additional pairs of eyes we had it covered. Not to mention how much observing’s fun factor increases when shared with other enthusiasts.

Sunspot giants
Several large sunspot regions, including the giant group left of center, Region 3780, and others to its west (right) have been producing numerous flares that have sparked recent geomagnetic storms. This photo is from August 9th.
Bob King

A steady stream of coronal mass ejections in the wake of solar flares from a VERY active and spotty Sun were behind the August 10-11 aurora and also what we may experience Sunday night, August 11-12. For your best chance at seeing the aurora, find a location with a dark northern sky so the cosmic lights don’t have to compete with city light pollution. Bring a camera. Any camera. If you hold your smartphone to the sky it automatically will put itself in dark mode (or can be put in dark mode) and let you do handheld, 3-second-long time exposures. On an iPhone, if you tap the small white triangle at the top of the screen, it will open up a menu where you can expose up to 10 seconds — plenty of time to record a moderately bright aurora and colors. Be sure to tap your screen to focus the starry sky when your ready to take a picture.

Colorful aurora
The aurora can be incredibly colorful especially in the camera. These rays were conspicuously red to the eye. Oxygen atoms bombarded by incoming, high-speed electrons are responsible for both the red and green colors.
Bob King

With a DSLR or mirrorless camera and tripod it’s super-easy to photograph the aurora. First, put everything in manual mode — lens and exposure selection alike. Then click the live-view button, center a bright star on the camera’s backscreen, magnify it with the magnifier button and manually focus your lens until the star is a tight point. You’re now ready to go! Try ISO 2500 with the lens wide open (f/3.5, 2.8 or 2) and an exposure of 10-15 seconds. Adjust as needed depending on the aurora’s appearance on the backscreen.

Aurora waiting game
The aurora is often a waiting game. Sometimes it looks like a diffuse, white haze to the eye as it did at times Saturday night. But with patience you’ll see amazing things. Bob King

Sunday night’s aurora is expected to begin around 9:30-10 p.m. CDT at the minor storm level (G1) and then ramp up to a G2. Well after midnight it will decline to a G1 and linger until dawn. Should the forecast be dead-on (never a guarantee) the lights may become more intense and widespread than Saturday night’s event. Let’s hope so. And if not, you’ll still have a great meteor shower to see plus Jupiter and Mars as icing on the cake. If you capture either aurora or a Perseid — or hopefully both at the same time — please share your image and comments with Sky & Telescope. Good luck!





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Space and Astronomy News
Author: Space and Astronomy News

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