Tamitha Skov Australia Britain New Zealand New York USA New York state Utah beautiful record Southern Tamitha Skov Australia Britain New Zealand New York USA New York state Utah

Solar storm could be seen in UK as NASA warns Earth at risk of direct hit

Reading now: 460
www.dailystar.co.uk

NASA warns that Earth is at risk of a direct hit.The phenomenon is a disturbance in particles thrown out by the electromagnetic eruptions of the sun.

NASA predicts the storm will hit Earth around midnight GMT on Monday (March 28). Despite NASA's prediction, the US National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) believes it will hit the planet 18 hours earlier at around 6am GMT.

When solar winds hit the Earth's magnetic field it causes the atmosphere to become fluorescent. This is known more commonly as aurora polaris, or the Northern Lights in the northern hemisphere, the Express reports.

Dr Tamitha Skov - known as the "space weather woman" for her online celestial forecasts - predicts reception and high-frequency radio issues on whichever side of the Earth is in the day time when the solar storm hits.She added that the NOAA prediction "indicates a faster solar storm that will hit harder".Dr Skov said that the effects "could reach the mid-latitudes" of the planet's surface.Asked where skywatchers may be able to see the aurora caused by the storm, she suggested that people in rural New York may be able to spot them, but someone as far south as Utah might not.New York sits below the UK, so there is a chance eagle-eyed Britons will be able to spot the lights.In the southern hemisphere, Dr Skov said those in southern New Zealand and Tasmania may be able to see the aurora "as long as it is dark enough" and the storm hits during the evening there.However, those living in Australian cities such as Victoria and Perth may not be so lucky.This is because the solar particles that hit Earth during a storm "are deflected towards the poles" by the Earth's magnetic sphere.Billy Teets, an astronomer at Vanderbilt Univesity in.

Read more on dailystar.co.uk
The website celebsbar.com is an aggregator of news from open sources. The source is indicated at the beginning and at the end of the announcement. You can send a complaint on the news if you find it unreliable.

Related News

DMCA