Northern Lights may appear in Ohio again on Sunday night | Mahoning Matters
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Miss Northern Lights in Ohio on Friday and Saturday? You may have another chance on Sunday

The National Weather Service in Jackson shared a photo of the Northern Lights as seen from their offices Friday night.
The National Weather Service in Jackson shared a photo of the Northern Lights as seen from their offices Friday night. Facebook

Ohioans from one end of the state to the other checked off what for many was a bucket list item Friday night, as the Northern Lights lit up the sky with color.

For those who missed the show, there may be another chance to see the aurora borealis Sunday night, according to the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration’s Space Weather Prediction Center.

Philomon Geertson, a meteorologist for the National Weather Service in Jackson, said those who want to catch a glimpse of the aurora will have the best chances if they get as far from city lights and other artificial light sources as possible.

He said it’s also helpful to have an open view to the north, and those who live in valleys would want to try to seek a spot with higher elevations.

Some social media users mentioned that it was easier to see the lights while viewing them through their phone cameras. While they said they could see little with the naked eye, some said the photos they took showed more brilliant colors.

Solar flares and coronal mass ejections, or CMEs, from a region of active spots on the sun are causing what the Space Weather Prediction Center says are very rare “Severe-Extreme” geomagnetic storms.

These storms are causing the aurora borealis to show up much farther south than is typical, and the center said “there have been reports of power grid irregularities and degradation to high-frequency communications and GPS.”

The center said Saturday that “another series of CMEs associated with flare activity ... are expected to merge and arrive at Earth by midday” Sunday, making more periods of geomagnetic storms likely.

Because of that, the center said the aurora borealis might be visible “over much of the northern half of the country and maybe as far south as Alabama.”

Geertson said Friday night’s lights were most visible from around 9 p.m. to midnight.

“The threat of additional strong flares and CMEs will remain until the large and magnetically strong sunspot cluster ... rotates out of view over the next several days,” the Space Weather Prediction Center said Saturday.

The last time there was a geomagnetic storm of this magnitude was in October 2003, Geertson said.

Social media was awash in colorful images people captured during the light show Friday night.

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