NASA is launching a rocket mission from Alaska as early as Saturday to study and help understand electrical circuitry ...
NASA’s GNEISS mission will launch twin rockets from Alaska in 2026 to map the electric currents driving auroras. Using multiple sub-payloads and radio signals, scientists will reconstruct electron ...
NASA is launching a rocket mission from Alaska as early as Saturday to study and help understand electrical circuitry ...
Greetings stargazers. The current sunspot cycle maximum continues to amaze. Several times during the past year, the Aurora ...
The infrared space telescope also detected water vapor, carbon dioxide and organic compounds streaming from the departing ...
Aurora borealis photos are everywhere lately. The truth is they’re no more common than they ever were. Here’s what the ...
The northern lights are expected to be visible over northern Michigan and the Upper Peninsula Friday night, Feb. 6, according ...
When can you see the Northern Lights in Alaska? The state has an aurora forecast that has information on the best time to ...
An international team of researchers has finally identified the "invisible power source" behind the light show: Alfvén waves.
Researchers from Embry-Riddle Aeronautical University in Florida are part of a team studying the dazzling phenomenon.
NASA’s GNEISS mission will use rockets and ground sensors to map three-dimensional electrical currents in auroras, offering direct measurements of auroral pathways in Earth’s upper atmosphere.