NOAA Warns: Aurora Activity may Impede Hurricane Recovery due to Geomagnetic Storms
The stunning light displays come as the sun nears the peak of its current 11-year cycle.
Visibility of the Northern Lights, or aurora borealis, increased across parts of the United States and Europe on Thursday following an intense solar storm, which the U.S. National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) warned could trigger geomagnetic storms on Earth and affect hurricane recovery efforts.
The lights illuminated the skies as far south in the United States as Alabama, Florida, Mississippi, and Texas and were also spotted across New York, Northern California, Massachusetts, and Illinois.
When the Earth is in the direct path of a CME, the highly magnetized and charged solar particles ejected from the sun interact with its magnetic field, producing geomagnetically induced currents that can potentially disrupt communication satellites and long-distance cables.
NOAA warned that a geomagnetic storm could impact ongoing recovery efforts for Hurricanes Helene and Milton.
Communication systems that depend on low-Earth orbit satellites or high-frequency communication may experience disruptions.
Power grids, already weakened by the hurricanes, could be put under further stress, while GPS services such as Navigation systems, may experience reception issues, the agency said.
The stunning light displays come as the sun is near the peak of its current 11-year cycle, meaning more solar activity such as solar flares, and more aurora sightings, could occur.