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It’s his turn now. His college football career hasn’t played out the way he imagined when he was a two-way standout for Batavia, but veteran Northern Illinois linebacker Quinn Urwiler wouldn’t trade a ...
Forecasters predict a handful of northern U.S. states have a small shot at seeing the northern lights Friday night, with chances of another appearance dimming by Saturday.
The possible aurora borealis coincides with the Perseids meteor shower, with hundreds of meteors likely visible in the night ...
The aurora borealis has a chance to appear for viewers in Alaska and the upper Midwest, including Minnesota, Wisconsin and ...
The northern lights could be visible in upstate New York near the Canadian border on Tuesday night, according to space weather predictions. The aurora borealis is notoriously difficult to predict ...
Among those areas across the United States include: Alaska, Washington, northern Idaho, Montana, North Dakota, Minnesota, northern Wisconsin and Upper Michigan.
Starting tonight and through the weekend, the northern lights will be visible, with auroras appearing further south than usual—possibly into New York and Idaho—due to geomagnetic storm conditions.
Parts of northeastern Washington, northern Idaho, Montana, North Dakota, northern Minnesota, Upper Michigan and northern Wisconsin have a chance to catch a glimpse of the northern lights this week.
Auroras could be visible — especially in darker, rural areas — in Alaska, Washington, Montana, North Dakota, South Dakota, Minnesota, Michigan, Wisconsin, Maine and northern parts of Idaho ...
Aurora displays known as the northern and southern lights are commonly visible near the poles, where charged particles from the sun interact with Earth's atmosphere.
A powerful geomagnetic storm is still be impacting Earth today. Does that mean you’ll see the northern lights tonight?
According to the NOAA, 24 states, including Alaska, Montana and North Dakota, might have a chance to see the northern lights June 1 and June 2.