The sun is at the peak of its 11-year cycle. That means an uptick in solar flares will lead to more chances to see the northern lights over the next couple of years.
Following in the footsteps of Aristotle and Galileo, NASA scientists look to take the next step in understanding auroras.
NASA has identified two types of auroras—fast-pulsating and flickering. Pulsating auroras flash on and off within seconds.
As astrotourism booms, the northern lights get a boost from digital photography. Read more at straitstimes.com.
Japanese scientists have created the first-ever long-term dataset about Earth's entire atmosphere, stretching all the way to ...
A newly compiled dataset of nearly one billion images of auroras is helping researchers categorize—and perhaps ultimately ...
Fans say this doodad, which doubles as a white noise machine, is their secret weapon for relaxation — don't miss this ...
Xanadu introduced its new photonic quantum computer Aurora today. Aurora, which builds on Xanadu’s previous X8 and Borealis ...
The Northern Lights are expected to appear in the New York skies very soon. Here's the best times to catch them.