Spyke
lemmy.world

Then again, some might argue that sharing the designation with millions of other people makes it SLIGHTLY less prestigious..

10
Hildegardereply
lemmy.world

As the winner of Time Magazine's person of the year in 2006, I disagree.

13
lemmy.world

Interesting viewpoint, where did you publish it?

ET AL GANG REPRESENT!!!

10

But et al. is by far the most published author, so they are at least sharing in the most prestigious title.

7

If you scroll down on the site you'll see a map of the globe as viewed from space towards the North Pole titled The Auroras. If you play the video it'll show the predicted areas that have a chance to see them. Looking at it earlier it looked like if you aren't in Canada it's a pretty low chance.

7

This would be awsome if I wernt under a permanent and thick grey cloud this year

14
Tipponreply
lemmy.dbzer0.com

Just remember that you might not see anything with the naked eye, but a camera will pick up the colour. Last time, I was able to get out, and once my eyes were used to the dark, I could see faint grey lines and waves in the sky :)

7

Yeah, thanks! I actually remember the advice from last time, I had managed to stay up the second night we were meant to see the lights, and I thought I might have (thought it was grey streaks like you describe), but looking through the camera it was clearly just a mixture of light pollution and clouds 😭

But forecast says clear skies Monday night, so here's hoping!

3
Tipponreply
lemmy.dbzer0.com

Yeah, I've got my fingers crossed for tomorrow night. Good luck 🙂

2
moosetwinreply
lemmy.dbzer0.com

yes yes it probably wasn't actually caused by solar radiation you're so clever

-56

I read this as a preemptive response, like with a silent “inb4”

7
lemmy.world

A freak cosmic particle caused the user ID of the commenter to duplicate

5

That's been largely disproven, the leading theory is that the cartridge holding in the earth sim was tilted

1
fhqwgadsreply
possumpat.io

Yeah IDK if people in the thread are actually familiar with the scale.

I'm fairly far north and I'm considering turning off my g3 email alerts and just leaving the bigger ones since it's generally a nothingburger.

4

Even the last G4 was barely visible where I was, but I think that had more to do with light pollution more than the intensity. And the timing of it was bad too

4
lemmy.zip

For someone living in sweden south of stockholm this probably means nothing right? I moved here a few months ago but havent been able to see aurora. They say sometimes you can see it from here.

4

Unfortunately probably not. G3 events aren't that uncommon, there's usually one every couple months. It never hurts to go look for a few minutes though. It's a pretty rough prediction, it's not set in stone. The best I've seen was a G4 and not the big G5 a few months ago.

4

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