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Aurora forecast today: Will you see Northern Lights amid G3 storm? Know here

Aurora forecast today: Will you see Northern Lights amid G3 storm? Know here

ByHT News Desk

Mar 23, 2025 10:18 AM IST

A strong geomagnetic storm will produce northern lights in nearly two dozen US states on Saturday night

A strong geomagnetic storm will produce northern lights in nearly two dozen US states on Saturday night, the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) prediction states. The forecast map and typical aurora visibility patterns during a G3 storm show that states from the Pacific Northwest to the Northeast will see the aurora borealis under favorable weather conditions.

A geomagnetic storm will create aurora formations in the US(NOAA)

A geomagnetic storm will create aurora formations in the US(NOAA)

Alaska, Montana, North Dakota, and Minnesota have a ‘high likelihood’ of seeing the aurora. If you live in these stats, you will likely see the Northern Lights tonight.

Read More: Northern lights this week? NOAA predicts strong G3 geomagnetic storm

Here's the list:

1. Alaska

2. Washington

3. Oregon

4. Idaho

5. Montana

6. Wyoming

7. North Dakota

8. South Dakota

9. Nebraska

10. Minnesota

11. Iowa

12. Wisconsin

13. Michigan

14. Illinois

15. Indiana

16. Ohio

17. Pennsylvania

18. New York

19. Vermont

20. New Hampshire

21. Maine

22. Massachusetts

This list starts with Alaska and includes northern states commonly within the auroral view line during strong geomagnetic storms, extending to states like Illinois and Oregon (mentioned as the southern limit for G3 visibility) and eastward to the Northeast.

Read More: Never-seen-before video of aurora by NASA astronaut impresses most, but some claim it’s ‘intensely fake’

Best time to see the lights

The Northern Lights are best viewed when it is dark outside, particularly between 10 PM and 2 AM local time, according to the NOAA. Visibility depends on factors like clear skies, minimal light pollution, and the storm’s intensity (forecasted Kp index of 6.67), and not all states may see the aurora equally well.

Why do Nothern Lights form?

The northern lights form when charged particles from the sun, carried by the solar wind, hit Earth’s atmosphere. During solar events like coronal mass ejections, these particles—mostly electrons and protons—travel to Earth and get trapped by its magnetic field. Funneled toward the poles, they collide with nitrogen and oxygen in the upper atmosphere, exciting the gases. As the gases release energy, they emit light: nitrogen glows purple or pink, oxygen green. This creates the aurora’s colorful display.

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