Aurora australis lit up skies across southern Australia days after four coronal mass ejections from the sun. While much of New South Wales missed out on the spectacle due to heavy cloud and rain, the light show was bigger than anything seen in Australia in decades. Geomagnetic solar storms occur when highly charged plasma erupts from the sun and is streamed into space. When those charged particles, known as the solar wind, hit the Earth’s magnetic field, they create the stunning visual displays known as auroras
► Subscribe to Guardian Australia on YouTube
Spectacular southern lights seen across Australia after ‘extreme’ solar storm
More Stories
Scientists hope sequencing genome of tiny ‘functionally extinct’ frog could help save it
Revealed: Chinese researchers can access half a million UK GP records
UK among lowest-ranked countries for ‘human flourishing’ in wellbeing study