A particularly active 'aurora season' could be just weeks away

There's no guarantee, but there are reasons to believe that the few weeks on either side of this month's fall equinox (Sept. 22) could see geomagnetic storms more intense than usual. It could mean a brief aurora season.

That's because of something called the Russell-McPherron Effect, which explains why the periods around Earth's two equinoxes, in March and September, often tend to have the most colorful auroral displays.

A paper published in 1973 argued that auroras consistently appeared more regularly during March and September, thanks to the magnetic fields of Earth and the solar wind being briefly aligned.

The solar wind is a stream of charged particles from the sun, which suddenly intensifies in the wake of solar flares and coronal mass ejections (CMEs) — powerful outbursts of radiation and solar material. 

Magnetic activity on the sun has a cycle that lasts 11 years. It's due to peak right about now. However, that's not why an aurora season could be imminent.

Auroras occur when charged particles in the solar wind enter Earth's magnetic field and strike oxygen and nitrogen molecules in the atmosphere; this excites the molecules, causing them to emit light in vivid colors.

While Earth's magnetic field and that of the solar wind are usually misaligned, thanks to the Russell-McPherron effect, Earth's magnetic poles are tilted during the equinoxes to receive the charged particles more easily. 

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