Thanks to a solar storm, the Northern Lights are anticipated to grace the skies across Western New York later this week.
If weather allows, the lights are expected to be visible Thursday night through early Friday morning. Right now the forecast calls for mostly cloudy skies Thursday night. Hopefully skies will clear out so we can catch a glimpse.
According to the Geophysical Institute at the University of Alaska at Fairbanks, activity will be highest on July 13, and people will have the incredible opportunity to witness the mesmerizing aurora borealis.
For the optimal viewing experience, experts suggest avoiding any sources of city lights and heading out to darker areas, as you need clear and dark skies to see the aurora.
The prime time to catch this natural phenomenon is between 9 p.m. and 3 a.m. local time, the university says.
According to NASA, solar storms happen when the sun sends out big bursts of energy called solar flares and coronal mass ejections. Think of it as the sun having fireworks in space.
As for the Northern Lights, these happen when charged particles, such as electrons and protons, collide with the gases in Earth's upper atmosphere. The collisions then create flashes of light that come together, creating the auroras we see dancing across the skies.
SEE MORE: 'Absolutely unreal': Astronaut witnesses aurora from space
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