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FIRST AURORAS OF NORTHERN SPRING: It is a well known scientific fact that equinoxes favor auroras. At this time of year, the slightest gust of solar wind can provoke bright lights around the poles. The phenomenon was in full effect last night in Sweden's Abisko National Park:
"Springtime IS aurora season here in Abisko," reports photographer and aurora tour guide Chad Blakley. "As the nights get shorter it seems like the auroras get more intense and their colours become more vivid. If we are lucky we have two more weeks of amazing aurora displays before the sun overpowers the northern lights."
The stage is set for more auroras tonight. A solar wind stream is gently buffeting Earth's magnetic field, prompting NOAA forecasters to estimate a 30% chance of polar geomagnetic storms on March 21. Aurora alerts: text, voice.
Realtime Aurora Photo Gallery
THE BRIGHTNESS OF COMET PAN-STARRS: Comet Pan-STARRS is receding from the sun and dimming as it goes, yet sky watchers are seeing it better than ever. Because the comet is moving into darker skies, its visibility is improving. Atmospheric sciences professor Richard Keen of the University of Colorado is an expert at measuring the brightness of astronomical objects. "My best estimate for its brightness yesterday is magnitude +1.9, a factor of five fainter than five days earlier," says Keen. "However, thanks to the increasing altitude of the comet in a somewhat darker sky, it is still just as easy to see with the naked eye - actually, a bit easier, because it's no longer buried in the trees." Keen took this picture of the comet setting over the continental divide on March 19th:
"The comet is easy to spot here in the clear high-altitude skies of Colorado," Keen continues. "It appears to the unaided eye in the twilight sky as a slightly fuzzy star. Observers in more humid or hazier climates still might need binoculars to locate the comet."
"PanSTARRS will likely fade another magnitude or two over the next week as the moon brightens towards full on the night of the 26th," he predicts. "Then, on the 28th of March, the moon will rise a couple of hours after sunset, and the comet will become visible in a dark sky for the first time (for Northern observers). I expect it will still be of naked-eye brightness."
More: NASA video, 3D orbit, ephemeris, light curves.
Realtime Comet Photo Gallery
Realtime Space Weather Photo Gallery
Realtime Noctilucent Cloud Photo Gallery
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