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Powerful Solar Storm Sends Auroras Far South as Agencies Watch for Impacts

Officials warn of potential disruptions to satellites, GPS, power grids following NOAA’s rare S4 radiation alert.

Overview

  • An X1-class solar flare with a directed coronal mass ejection reported by SCIESMEX set off a strong geomagnetic event that expanded the auroral oval.
  • NOAA issued an S4 solar radiation alert described in reports as the most intense in more than two decades as effects peaked around January 20.
  • A G4-level geomagnetic storm produced striking auroras on January 19–20 across Europe, Canada and the United States, reaching unusually low latitudes including the U.K.
  • Cosmonaut Sergey Kud-Sverchkov recorded a vivid aurora from the International Space Station showing rare reds, pinks, greens and yellows.
  • Ground footage circulated widely, including a GoPro time-lapse from Cornwall by Christopher Probert and a widely shared image over Stonehenge, while authorities reported no major infrastructure failures.