Why might you still miss auroras after a good forecast?
Show answer & explanation
Answer: Clouds and bright skies hide them
Clouds and bright skies hide them ✓ — Correct! A good aurora forecast only means the space-weather side looks favorable. You still need a dark, clear sky to actually see the display. Clouds can block the whole sky, city lights can wash out faint auroras, moonlight can brighten the background, and twilight can make weak auroras disappear to the eye. In other words, “aurora happening” and “you can see it” are not the same thing.
Auroras only show on cameras — Wrong. Cameras can often detect faint colors better than human eyes, especially with longer exposure times, but auroras are real light phenomena in the sky. If the display is strong enough and the sky is dark enough, people can absolutely see it directly.
You must hear them first — Wrong. There are occasional reports of aurora-related sounds, but they are rare and not required for observation. Most aurora viewing has nothing to do with hearing anything.
More Astronomy questions
- Why does Earth have a glowing sodium layer high above it?
- Why do some SpaceX launches have such narrow launch windows?
- That giant glowing “jellyfish” isn’t fire—what is it?
- Why do aurora forecasts improve closer to the event?
- Why can the same Kp mean different chances in different places?
- Why is the Kp index used in aurora forecasts?
