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NORTH VANCOUVER, BRITISH COLUMBIA – JUNE 03: The Aurora borealis, commonly known as the northern lights, is seen at Cleveland Dam Park on June 03, 2025 in North Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada. (Photo by Andrew Chin/Getty Images)
NEW YORK – Eyes to the sky! New York residents could catch a rare glimpse of the glowing Northern Lights to start off the week.
What we know:
A full-halo coronal mass ejection (CME) was seen by satellites erupting from the Sun on Saturday, prompting a Geomagnetic Storm Watch to be issued through Tuesday.
The solar storm could lead to a viewing of the Northern Light across much of the northern United States, including New York.
When to look up
Local perspective:
Impacts from the CME are expected to interact with the Earth’s atmosphere between Monday night and Tuesday morning East Coast time.
Under the current forecast, the Northern Lights will be best viewed in the early hours of Tuesday morning.
How to watch
What you can do:
The NOAA says that viewing the aurora depends on four important facts: geomagnetic activity, location, darkness and timing:
- Find a north-facing location with an unobstructed view
- Go out at night, away from city lights
- Look up between 10 p.m. and 2 p.m.
What is a CME?
Dig deeper:
A coronal mass ejection occurs when an eruption of charged material from the Sun travels through space, to reach Earth.
Unlike a regular CME, which departs from one area, halo CME emissions appear as a ring on a coronagraph image. According to the SWPC, full halo CMEs from the front side of the Sun almost always result in geomagnetic storms on Earth.
These types of CMES can cause disruptions to technology, including the power grid, satellite operations and GPS.
The Source: Information from this article was sourced from the NOAA and FOX Weather.