![]() Some good places would be in the mountains, public parks or ball fields far out in the country. This tends to give the sky a background glow that obscures northern lights. You need to find an area that has an unobstructed view of the northern sky, and you must be far away from urban and suburban night "light pollution." This means you should not be near a city, a mall, or other places that have a lot of bright lights at night. There really is no "best place" for viewing. will send you an email notification when there is a potential for northern lights, if you sign up for this free service. A few of the many web sites that report solar weather are listed below. ![]() The best anyone can do to predict northern lights is to follow events in the weather on the sun’s surface, which is where auroras originate. Viewing the aurora this far south, and with the amount of night-time light pollution in the urban regions, is difficult at best. Maryland is too far south to view most northern light displays, but they are occasionally visible. ![]() Photos from November 2004's activity can be seen at the Spaceweather gallery. There was an *intense* sea green pulsating cloud near the horizon, and vertical "beams" of green shading to pink up to a max of about 2/3 the way to full overhead!" noticed it from about midnight until about 12:20 am, likely it began earlier, but the peak was in this time for my location in Northern MD (close to the Pennsylvania border in Street). A resident in northern Maryland reported that although she Many Maryland residents were treated to a spectacular aurora display around midnight on November 8, 2004. If you missed these events, you can see photos from October 2001, November 2001, and August, 2002 at. In October and November of 2001 several coronal mass ejections occurred, creating aurora displays visible in Maryland. In 2000 the Sun experienced a solar maximum. During periods of maximum solar activity, Marylanders have a better chance of viewing these spectacular light shows. On the brighter side, a geomagnetic storm can trigger aurora borealis, or "Northern Light" displays, that might be visible in Maryland if the storm is strong enough. The result of this solar activity can include potential hazards such as disruption of electronic communications and electrical power transmission. When this material slams into our planet's upper atmosphere geomagnetic storms are created. Very large solar flares and coronal mass ejections erupt from the Sun during the solar maximum, ejecting clouds of energetic debris toward Earth. During this period, the Sun produces the greatest number of sun spots and associated phenomena, and generates intense " space weather".
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