This photo by Martin Popek (Czech Republic) on spaceweather.com is a cluster of jellyfish sprites alongside a rain of Perseid meteors, and we think that it looks like unexplainable nature and a glitch in the future both at the same time. Fantastic!
seen from Argentina
seen from Syria
seen from Canada

seen from United States

seen from Australia
seen from China

seen from United States
seen from Türkiye
seen from China
seen from China
seen from Canada
seen from Netherlands
seen from United States
seen from China
seen from China
seen from China
seen from Japan

seen from Saudi Arabia
seen from United States

seen from Canada
This photo by Martin Popek (Czech Republic) on spaceweather.com is a cluster of jellyfish sprites alongside a rain of Perseid meteors, and we think that it looks like unexplainable nature and a glitch in the future both at the same time. Fantastic!
THE GREAT GEOMAGNETIC STORM OF MAY 1921: 100 years ago today, the biggest solar storm of the 20th century struck Earth. Buildings caught fire, telephone lines burned out, and auroras were sighted from ships at sea crossing the equator.
Habitat Crisis: Dr. A. Dunning [OTF2017]
Habitat Crisis: Dr. A. Dunning [OTF2017]
Observing the Frontier 2017 (OTF2017)
This is from the third annual Observing the Frontier conference, hosted by Suspicious 0bservers, last weekend. You won’t find a better explanation of what is going on in the world around us. Period.
Video Description Dr. August Dunning is a visiting professor at CalTech, and you can learn more…
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Earthgrazers are meteors that skim horizontally through the upper atmosphere. They are slow and dramatic, streaking far across the sky. The best time to look for Earthgrazers is between 2:00 to 2:30 a.m. local time when Aquarius is just peeking above the horizon.
LUNAR ECLIPSE TONIGHT
Well technically in the morning but at 2 am tonight theres suppose to be a “blood moon” named Peggy Whose going to see it? My phone or tablet wont let me do links but I read about at spaceweather.com
Lunar Eclipse
LUNAR ECLIPSE, TUESDAY MORNING: The mainstream media is abuzz with reports of a "blood moon" on Tuesday morning. The scientific term is "lunar eclipse." On April 15th at 6 minutes past midnight Pacific Time (3:06 a.m Eastern Time), the Moon will enter the sunset-colored colored shadow of Earth, producing a total eclipse of the Moon:
Above: A total lunar eclipse on Dec. 21, 2010. Photo credit: Gary A. Becker
The color of Earth's shadow, and thus the color of the eclipsed Moon, depends substantially on the amount of volcanic ash and other aerosols floating in the stratosphere. According to atmospheric sciences professor Richard Keen of the University of Colorado, the stratosphere is clear. This means the eclipse will be not "blood red," but rather bright orange.
See for yourself. The event will be visible from Australia, New Zealand, and all of the Americas: visibility map. It's so bright, even observers in light-polluted cities will have no trouble enjoying the show. Got clouds? No problem. The event will be broadcast live on the web by the Coca-Cola Science Center at Columbus State University in Georgia.
For more information about the eclipse, get the full story and a video from Science@NASA.
~Copied from SpaceWeather.com
Faint Lunar Eclipse Tonight
Apparently, there's going to be a lunar eclipse tonight, or a partial one anyway. I don't think I'll be able to see it here on the west coast of the U.S., but apparently it will be visible from the eastern U.S., in Africa and Europe.