Another display of the northern lights could be visible this weekend in several U.S. states following a severe solar storm.The National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration Space Weather Prediction Center forecast a planetary K-index -- which characterizes the magnitude of geomagnetic storms - of five out of a scale of nine for Friday and Saturday,
A La Niña winter just started, but it isn't expected to last long. National forecasters are already looking ahead to the spring season.
Normal snowfall, cold temps expected in North Dakota the rest of the winter. Meanwhile, an arctic blast is on the way for the holiday weekend.
Satellite imagery captured blowing snow sweeping across parts of North Dakota and Minnesota on Friday, January 17, as an arctic front settled in to the region.The National Weather Service warned of blizzard conditions along the border with Canada,
The colorful northern lights may reveal themselves to South Dakotans Friday night due to an impending solar storm forecast to reach Earth.
The northern lights display should continue well into the weekend, possibly reaching down into the middle parts of the country.
The colorful northern lights may reveal themselves to a wide swath of Americans Friday night due to an impending solar storm forecast to reach Earth.
Have you hoped to see the northern lights shine over Iowa? You may have a chance tonight if you head far enough north.
The agency expects a minor or greater geomagnetic storm—a disturbance of Earth’s magnetic field—on Saturday, which increases the likelihood of northern lights displays being visible to more people, as the effects of a recent coronal mass ejection reach Earth, according to NOAA’s three-day forecast.
The key for all upland birds is available thermal cover, said Jesse Kolar, upland game management supervisor for the North Dakota Game and Fish Department in Dickinson.
A new bill introduced by State Senator David Hogue aims to explore the potential to expand the state’s energy industry by adding nuclear power.
In the name of protecting migratory birds and the North Dakotans they fly over, some state lawmakers want to make the darkest spring nights darker.