UK could see aurora for another night on Tuesday

Simon KingAir server in front
BBC Weather Watchers/SAF37YThe Northern Lights were first seen in England this autumn on Monday night, And he can go back on Tuesday.
Northern Scotland, from North Wales to Norfolk and Kent, Aurora’s bright colors were seen after a strong solar storm.
Space Air Air Estimators emphasized Aurora’s chances of Aurora in the afternoon after the satellites followed solar energy and received an explosion known as a coronal mass ejection on the surface of the sun.
Increasing solar energy went to our atmosphere in which he interacted with oxygen and nitrogen, and created the ranks, greens and red colors we know as Aurora.
BBC Weather Watchers/Paul Appleby
BBC Weather Watchers/RossiMet Office Space Air Center argues that increasing solar activity can continue with the possibility of reaching a G1-G5 scale G4 on Tuesday night.
This will potentially bring a greater chance to see Aurora, even with the naked eye.
The US Space Forecast Center confirmed that it was a “moderate geomagnetic storm” that reached G2 on a scale in the early hours of Tuesday.
Although it is not rare to see Aurora in the northern regions of England, their visible in the south requires a stronger solar storm.
The event is likely to return to normal levels on Wednesday.
BBC Weather Watchers/Keeponrunning
BBC Weather Watchers/UkweaterViewThe northern lights are caused by solar winds carrying loaded particles interacting with the magnetic field of the Earth.
The chances of seeing the United Kingdom increased late on Saturday night, a fast -moving coronal mass ejection, which is the “release of plasma and magnetic field from the Corona of the Sun”.





