X1.9-rated solar flare erupted from sunspot 4341 on January 18, causing R-3 radio blackouts.
The sun erupted with an X1.9-class solar flare. NASA's Solar Dynamics Observatory captured the blast in multiple wavelengths.
Aurora alert! The colossal solar storm could impact and trigger impressive northern lights.
A NOAA forecast has Northern Lights visible in northern U.S. states overnight on Monday, Jan. 19 through Tuesday, Jan. 20, as ...
The sun released a powerful solar flare followed by a fast-moving coronal mass ejection on January 18, resulting in a ...
The sun recently erupted with a potent X-class solar flare, triggering a fast-moving coronal mass ejection (CME) that is ...
A massive X1.9 solar flare and coronal mass ejection lit up the northern skies with dazzling auroras captured by NASA.
Forecasters at NOAA's Space Weather Prediction Center monitored a solar flare lasting for hours on Sunday. The Coronal Mass ...
NASA reported a significant X-class solar flare, specifically an X1.9 event, on January 18, which was captured by its Solar ...
The sun released an X-class solar flare on Sunday afternoon, increasing northern lights chances for Monday night.
Solar flares are powerful bursts of radiation. A SWPC report added that the storm calmed and reached G4 status again on ...
Astronomers have now seen some of its finest magnetic threads in sharper detail than ever before, and those tiny features could change how you think about solar storms that shake life on Earth.