X5.1 solar flare, G4 geomagnetic storm watch

(spaceweatherlive.com)

359 points | by sva_ 18 hours ago ago

95 comments

  • Animats 9 hours ago ago

    US power grid info:

    PJM:

        Geomagnetic Disturbance Warning 
        11.11.2025 19:25 (PJM times are Eastern Standard).
    
        PJM-RTO
     
    A Geomagnetic Disturbance Warning has been issued for 19:25 on 11.11.2025 through 04:00 on 11.12.2025 . A GMD warning of K7 or greater is in effect for this period.

    This is only a warning. There are no listed actions being taken. When you see Geomagnetic Disturbance Action, not just Warning, there's a problem. That happened most recently on June 1, 2025. Extra people are probably on standby all night in case something happens.

    CAISO: Nothing.

    ERCOT: Nothing.

    Hydro-Québec: Multiple snow-related outages near Montreal and some other locations.

    Background info from the last time HN got wound up about this.[1]

    [1] https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=44152154

  • PetitPrince 6 hours ago ago

    The Swiss Weather Office official app has a crowdsourced photo gallery:

    https://www.meteosuisse.admin.ch/services-et-publications/ap...

    Look at the pictures from 3AM onwards on the 12 of November: you'll have a nice overview of how the aurora looked like from Switzerland (it's a time sensitive app and they certainly don't keep the pictures forever).

    • dotancohen 5 hours ago ago

      The curvature of the Earth can be deducted from those photos on the map! It is clear to see the aurora completely above the horizon in the Northern Swiss photos, and straddling the horizon in the photos from the south.

    • argiope 2 hours ago ago

      This photo gallery also provides very nice pictures around Germany and the Alps: https://www.foto-webcam.eu/2025/11/12/0330

  • fghorow 17 hours ago ago

    [1] is a real-time forecast for the auroral oval. See if you are in with a chance. Clear Skies!

    [1] https://www.spaceweatherlive.com/en/auroral-activity/auroral...

  • therobots927 11 hours ago ago

    I saw this in the Denver area in Colorado, US an hour and a half ago. I looked up and couldn’t believe the sky was red. Took me a while to realize it was the aurora borealis. Very cool!

  • beAbU 8 hours ago ago

    I'm in Ireland and went out last night to try and find it, last year I got some spectacular photos from my bedroom window. Alas it only peaked as it was over the US so sadly I missed out.

    Ireland is far enough north that we actually get the aurora somewhat regularly. We rarely have clear skies though, making it a true "planets align" thing to actually see it.

    • Balinares 7 hours ago ago

      There were some beautiful ones overhead around 2am and I slept right through them. Ah well.

  • gpm 13 hours ago ago

    Reports of seeing the aurora right now across North America down to the US/Mexico border. If that describes you and you're not under cloud cover (like I unfortunately am) I'd recommend going outside and finding somewhere dark with a clear view north.

    Cell phone cameras see it better than people for whatever reason, so looking at it through your phone is an option.

    Request for "very low latitude" pictures from a researcher here: https://bsky.app/profile/vincentledvina.bsky.social/post/3m5...

  • jodacola 12 hours ago ago

    Fully visible with naked eye in Kansas City. Beautiful magenta hues in the sky. My first time seeing an aurora in person.

    • alexgaribay 12 hours ago ago

      I see it as well in southern KC. I've been to Alaska in the winter with hopes to the see the Northern Lights. Pretty awesome to see it this far south!

  • nreilly 15 hours ago ago

    This has a pretty good view of the aurora now: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hfF9bhaBuvw

    • sva_ 15 hours ago ago

      That's really cool! But that's actually one of the previous CMEs, not this one. Very nice to see nonetheless.

    • Casteil 14 hours ago ago

      Nice. Looks like it was peaking around 21:00 - 22:00 local time, got pretty intense for a while.

  • throw48753 10 hours ago ago

    I know there are a lot of comments from people saying they’ve seen it, but as I understand it this solar flare won’t hit until 16h UTC, or about 12 hours from now, and there are two weaker flares hitting about now that are currently visible? Is that understanding correct?

    • throwawaymaths 10 hours ago ago

      Yes, and it's in the article.

    • Digory 10 hours ago ago

      So - even bigger tomorrow? Tonight was pretty amazing.

  • apawloski 3 hours ago ago

    Is there a way to connect the Alert/Warnings/Watches from SWPC to specific events? It seems like there are at least three different solar events and it's hard for me to understand if they've all passed or if we're expecting more.

    • drmpeg 2 hours ago ago
      • apawloski 2 hours ago ago

        That's what I'm most curious about -- how do you see that it hasn't arrived yet when you're looking at SWPC?

        Here is the SWPC forecast [0]

        Time_UTC,Nov_12,Nov_13,Nov_14

        00-03UT,8.67 (G4),6.67 (G3),4.67 (G1)

        03-06UT,8.33 (G4),6.33 (G2),4.00

        06-09UT,7.00 (G3),6.00 (G2),3.33

        09-12UT,7.00 (G3),4.67 (G1),3.67

        12-15UT,6.00 (G2),4.00,3.33

        15-18UT,5.67 (G2),3.33,3.00

        18-21UT,7.67 (G4),4.33,3.00

        21-00UT,6.00 (G2),4.67 (G1),3.33

        So I guess 18-21UTC today it'll get around 7.7kP, but that's lower than what hit this morning, when I'd expect X5.1 to be larger? Is that how I should interpret this?

        [0] https://www.swpc.noaa.gov/communities/space-weather-enthusia...

        • drmpeg 2 hours ago ago

          Yes, you have it correct.

          However, predicting the effects of solar flares is very difficult. Not only does the particle stream have to hit the Earth, it has to couple with the magnetic field.

          Large flares can cause small events on Earth and vice versa.

          • apawloski 2 hours ago ago

            Thanks for clarifying. I’m bummed that I didn’t prioritize going out last night to observe. I was thinking bigger glare would be better aurora tonight.

  • rpcope1 16 hours ago ago

    You can see the real time magnetic field change when it hits: https://dasi.barlow.cpi.com/dashboard

  • AlexErrant 11 hours ago ago

    If you're in Chicagoland, was visible about 15m ago https://imgur.com/a/36cncec

    Not so much now, but maybe it'll come back!

    • bobmcnamara 11 hours ago ago

      Down in northern Missouri too

      • drewnick 11 hours ago ago

        Upstate South Carolina as well

  • ofalkaed 6 hours ago ago

    Aurora is going pretty strong here in northern Minnesota, filling most of the sky. A jet is going over way up there right now, they must be getting a hell of a show.

  • abujazar 17 hours ago ago

    Also: 100 % cloud cover in basically all of Northern Europe :/ Iceland is probably the place to be for the aurora show!

    • DonaldFisk 10 hours ago ago

      Scotland, 56 degrees north - I was able to see the aurora through occasional gaps in fast moving clouds around 0400hrs. Red, easily visible to the naked eye.

    • sva_ 16 hours ago ago

      In northern Germany, it seems like clouds will clear up tomorrow night, when the CME arrives, according to meteoblue? I can only hope.

    • onion2k 17 hours ago ago

      Yep. It's raining pretty hard here in the North East of the UK. Not much point in going to look.

      • thebruce87m 16 hours ago ago

        Note to non-UK readers:

        Most of the time when someone says they are in the “North East of the UK” it’s not some Scotsman up in Shetland it is an English person who is currently in the North East of England.

        The North East of England is in the middle part of the UK mainland.

        • inopinatus 15 hours ago ago

          Similarly, the part of your body commonly referred to as “the bottom” is in fact closer to half-way down and not at the bottom at all.

          I will leave any possible joke about being legless after a night out in Newcastle-upon-Tyne to the experts.

          • lukan 9 hours ago ago

            "Most of the time when someone says they are in the “North East of the UK” it’s not some Scotsman up in Shetland it is an English person who is currently in the North East of England."

            So you think this is simply wrong? (Like this)

            • lukan 7 hours ago ago

              (Wrong reply, too late to delete)

        • lukan 16 hours ago ago

          So .. they don't see scotland as part of the UK anyway? Why was it such an issue then that they wanted to leave? (And why were there bloody wars fought about it in the first place?)

          • permo-w 15 hours ago ago

            I think most people say "the North East" as a synecdoche for "the North East of England". the commenter being referred to likely just misspoke

          • hdgvhicv 15 hours ago ago

            Who wanted to leave? What wars?

            • lukan 9 hours ago ago

              Scotland the UK? (They were allowed to vote in the end and voted to remain)

              And wars happened when scotland was forced to become part of the UK in medieval times. (Braveheart)

              • hdgvhicv 7 hours ago ago

                So Scotland didn’t want to leave. And Scotland didn’t unite with England until after the Scottish King took over he English throne hundreds of years after the time of William Wallace

                You might be confusing the U.K. with the USA where a pet of the country there wanted to leave and were refused and that did lead to war, and that happened far more recently than 700 years ago.

            • kjs3 15 hours ago ago

              Someone with a tiny little...um...axe to grind and not enough sense to take it someplace where people care. You can tell when they have to go back to Culloden to try and drag something up to wave around.

      • dom96 17 hours ago ago
      • kilroy123 16 hours ago ago

        It's raining off and on in London as well.

        • mr_toad 12 hours ago ago

          No sun ‘til next week :-(

      • SoftTalker 17 hours ago ago

        "...geomagnetic storm watch for tomorrow as the cloud could impact our planet as early as 16 UTC on 12 November"

        • onion2k 17 hours ago ago

          UK in November... It'll be raining again tomorrow.

          • greenbit 13 hours ago ago

            Ah, but tonight it's raining protons

  • JKCalhoun 11 hours ago ago

    Dad sent me a photo [1] from Alaska of the red light. He said they rarely get it "so far south" (he is in southern Alaska).

    [1] (Not a great photo, but you get the idea.) https://imgur.com/a/TfkcbJQ

    • esseph 10 hours ago ago

      On the Kenai Peninsula? Great spot if so!

  • gattr 7 hours ago ago

    Shameless plug: active region (and sunspot group) 4274 has already produced several X-class solar flares, alas, I didn't manage to catch one during my short weekend imaging session. Though there was a nice prominence; 38-min time lapse (Earth to scale):

    https://app.astrobin.com/u/GreatAttractor?i=9tkxay#gallery

  • scorpionnegro 2 hours ago ago

    D Información de las representativas fórmulas para encuestar e secuestrar el circulo matemático q carcule la fuerza de velocidad es en el encontrar la física cuántica

  • superkuh 16 hours ago ago

    We won't know any actionable detail till about 1 hour before it arrives at Earth. That's when interplanetary coronal mass ejections actually have their magnetic field orientation and intensity measured by ACE and other satellites far out at the L1 lagrange point: https://services.swpc.noaa.gov/images/ace-mag-swepam-24-hour...

    If you see the red line on this plot^, the interplanetary magnetic field, be more than -10 nanotesla for about 4 hours then there's a good chance of lower than normal latitude aurora. Negative means the magnetic field is pointing downwards out of the ecliptic plane of the solar system and this is the most energetically favorable orientation for reconnecting CME magnetic field lines with Earth's magnetic field lines and letting solar particles/energy in.

    It can be 20nT positive (upwards) magnetic field with intense density and high velocity but still be a non-event aurora-wise just because energy is delivered to the Earth's ring currents at 10x slower rate than if it's pointing downwards.

    None of the WSA-ENLIL or related predictive models take into consideration the magnetic field orientation of iCMEs because it's really hard to know from remote observations. They can be thought of as warnings to pay attention to the ACE L1 measurements.

    • Havoc 13 hours ago ago

      Nice comment. Thanks for explaining

  • hnburnsy 13 hours ago ago

    G4 reached...

    https://www.swpc.noaa.gov/news/g4-severe-storm-levels-reache...

    >G4 (Severe) Storm Levels Reached! published: Wednesday, November 12, 2025 01:40 UTC G4 (Severe) storm levels reached on 12 November at 0120 UTC (8:20pm EST)! Geomagnetic storm conditions are anticipated to continue into the night. Stay informed at spaceweather.gov for the latest. The included aurora images are of the aurora shining over northeastern Colorado.

    • sva_ 12 hours ago ago

      Be aware that this is from a previous X flare, afaik

  • Arainach 17 hours ago ago

    > could impact our planet as early as 16 UTC on 12 November

    Is that 16:00 or 00:16?

    • aaronmdjones 17 hours ago ago

      16 hundred hours; 16:00. Since revised down to midday (12 UTC).

      https://www.swpc.noaa.gov/sites/default/files/styles/pad_sid...

      • deskamess 16 hours ago ago

        Bad timing for North America Eastern TZ - day break here. Pacific/Mountain TZ should be fine.

        • CoastalCoder 16 hours ago ago

          In Rhode Island it seems like auroras practically guarantee overcast skies.

          Update: tonight the sky is clear and the air is frigid. I guess this logically implies there won't be an aurora :)

    • aftbit 16 hours ago ago

      ISO timestamps are the one true way:

      2025-11-12T16Z

  • PeaceTed 9 hours ago ago

    Down in Victoria, Australia. Looks like the clouds should clear just in time for night fall and a decent show. Very cool.

  • schainks 9 hours ago ago

    I can currently photograph this on my mobile phone in seattle from my backyard, good times!

  • drmpeg 13 hours ago ago

    A severe geomagnetic storm is starting now (November 12 0000Z). But it's from the previous X-flares (X1.7 and X1.2), not the X5.1 flare.

    • mr_toad 12 hours ago ago

      From what I’ve read that could be bad, because prior flares can clear a path (through the solar wind) for later flares to move faster and hit harder.

  • mr_toad 12 hours ago ago

    Billions of tonnes of matter ejected at millions of kph. It’s shame we can’t harness that energy.

    • gpm 12 hours ago ago

      Perhaps we should start with more local less violent events like hurricanes and volcanic eruptions.

    • cwillu 11 hours ago ago

      The regular photons are a start

    • mouse_ 12 hours ago ago

      it would have to be quite the harness.

  • rhinoceraptor 8 hours ago ago

    I'm disappointed I missed it, I had disabled my Aurora phone alert after it woke me up for a 1% chance of seeing it a few weeks ago. I saw a bit of light in SE Michigan at about 1:30 AM EST, but just a tinge of green.

  • zombot 8 hours ago ago

    Too bad, it's not about a wristwatch that displays geomagnetic storms.

  • meindnoch 15 hours ago ago

    Carrington event 2.0?

    • sva_ 15 hours ago ago

      Definitely no.

      • codr7 7 hours ago ago

        Not yet, there's a whole bunch of wildcards in the air right now.

  • aussieguy1234 9 hours ago ago
  • NooneAtAll3 11 hours ago ago

    relevant xkcd: https://xkcd.com/2233/

  • shashanoid 9 hours ago ago

    cool super amazing

  • snitzr 16 hours ago ago

    Are we doomed by the next Carrington Event?

  • sigmaprimus 14 hours ago ago

    what effect if any will the solar flare emissions have on the new ish constellation style satellite networks? and or vice versa? EG would a shielded group or constellation provide a pathway for charge particles around the Earth?

  • aussieguy1234 15 hours ago ago

    looks like i'll be going out tonight

  • brcmthrowaway 17 hours ago ago

    Could this destroy the ISS?

    • abujazar 17 hours ago ago

      No, they'll just get a spectacular view of the aurora.

    • natebc 17 hours ago ago

      no