Northern Lights March 2026 | NOAA G1 Geomagnetic Storm Watch
Space Weather · March 6, 2026

Northern Lights Could Light Up the U.S. Tonight

NOAA has issued a G1 geomagnetic storm watch for March 6. Here’s what’s driving it, where to look, and exactly how to monitor conditions in real time.

G1 Watch Aurora Borealis Equinox Effect March 2026
Aurora borealis green and red light display over a lake — G1 geomagnetic storm watch March 2026
Equinox timing and solar wind are combining for a potential aurora display this week. Credit: Getty Images

The National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration’s Space Weather Prediction Center (NOAA SWPC) issued a G1-class geomagnetic storm watch for Friday, March 6, 2026. The watch is driven by a coronal hole high-speed stream — fast-moving solar wind escaping from an opening in the sun’s outer atmosphere — reaching Earth and compressing its magnetic field.

A G1 event is the lowest level on NOAA’s five-point G-scale. It can push the aurora oval farther south than usual, making the northern lights potentially visible across northern U.S. states. Precise timing is difficult to pin down; aurora forecasters recommend monitoring live solar wind data rather than relying on a fixed hour. This week’s timing also lines up with the weeks before the spring equinox on March 20 — a period that statistically sees a rise in geomagnetic activity.

🛰️

NOAA SWPC — G1 Geomagnetic Storm Watch in Effect

A G1 (Minor) geomagnetic storm watch was issued for Friday, March 6, 2026. The driver is a negative polarity coronal hole high-speed stream. Monitor live alerts at NOAA SWPC Alerts & Warnings and the 3-Day Geomagnetic Forecast for updates as conditions evolve.

What Actually Powers the Northern Lights?

When charged particles from the sun reach Earth, they interact with the magnetic field and atmosphere to produce aurora. The process has four clear steps — tap each to learn more.

☀️
Coronal Hole
Opening on the sun’s surface releasing high-speed plasma
💨
Solar Wind
Charged particles travel 1.5M km/h toward Earth
🌍
Magnetosphere
If Bz turns south, Earth’s field connects and lets particles in
🌌
Aurora
Particles collide with O₂ and N₂, releasing green, red, violet light

Source: NOAA SWPC — Coronal Holes explainer

What Does the Bz Reading Mean for Tonight?

Drag the slider to simulate a Bz value and see what it means for aurora chances. Bz is the most critical real-time indicator — track it on NOAA’s Real-Time Solar Wind feed.

Bz value (nT): 0 nT
−25 nT (very south)+10 nT (north)
Adjust the slider to check what Bz means for aurora activity.

Which U.S. States Could See the Northern Lights?

Based on NOAA’s aurora view line, below are the states in each category. Select a tier to see the list.

🏔️ Alaska 🌲 N. Washington 🌄 N. Idaho ⛰️ N. Montana 🌾 N. North Dakota 🌾 N. South Dakota 🌊 N. Minnesota 🌲 N. Wisconsin 🏞️ N. Michigan 🦞 Maine
💡 Auroras may appear low on the northern horizon in primary-zone states even during moderate G1 activity. Extended-zone states require stronger-than-forecast conditions. Source: NOAA SWPC

The Equinox Effect: Why Aurora Odds Double This Month

The weeks surrounding the spring equinox are statistically more active for geomagnetic storms — and science has explained why since 1973.

Higher aurora probability around equinoxes vs. solstices
Mar 20
Spring equinox 2026 at 10:46 a.m. EDT (14:46 UTC)
1973
Russell–McPherron paper first describing the equinox effect

When Earth’s axis sits side-on to the sun — as happens around both equinoxes — the south-pointing component of the solar wind’s magnetic field more efficiently cancels out Earth’s own north-pointing field. This opens pathways for solar plasma to enter near-Earth space along magnetic field lines, making geomagnetic disturbances and auroras statistically more common. The phenomenon was first formally described by scientists Christopher Russell and Robert McPherron in the Journal of Geophysical Research in 1973.

The March 2026 equinox also comes as Solar Cycle 25 is in its declining phase, following a maximum that NASA and NOAA reported was likely reached in October 2024. Solar Cycle 25 is expected to continue until around 2030. Sunspot numbers and flare activity have been trending downward since the peak, and early March 2026 has seen low flare activity with the current event driven by a coronal hole rather than an active sunspot region. The cycle remains capable of producing significant storms as it declines, but strong individual events depend on solar activity, not the season alone.

🌕

Moonlight Interference: Waning Gibbous on March 6

A waning gibbous moon, approximately 89% illuminated (exact percentage is location-dependent), rises a few hours after dark across North America on March 6. Moonlight can wash out faint auroras. For the best views, aim for windows after moonset in your area — check local moonset times at TimeandDate before heading out.

Where to Go and What You Need

Four things that will make or break your aurora experience tonight.

🌑

Find a Dark Site

City lights drown out faint aurora. Use a light pollution map to find genuinely dark ground within reach. Even a 20-minute drive from a city centre makes a real difference in what you can see.

🧭

Clear Northern Horizon

Aurora in G1 conditions typically sits low in the northern sky. Open fields, hilltops, or lake shores with an unobstructed northern view are ideal. Avoid valleys and areas blocked by trees or buildings to the north.

👁️

Allow Eye Adaptation

Your eyes need 20–30 minutes to fully adapt to darkness. Avoid looking at bright phone screens during this time — if you must, use your phone’s red-light mode. Faint aurora that looks gray to the naked eye often appears vivid green or purple in photos.

📊

Watch Live Forecasts

Aurora is inherently unpredictable and arrives in waves. Check NOAA’s Space Weather Enthusiasts Dashboard and keep an eye on Kp index values. A Kp of 4–5 or higher is needed for southern views. Also see past KarmActive aurora coverage for context on sighting reports.

How to Photograph Aurora With a Smartphone

No professional camera needed — your phone can capture a stunning aurora shot if you follow these steps.

1

Switch to Night Mode or Pro Mode

Available on most modern smartphones. These modes extend exposure time and capture more light — critical for dim auroras.

2

Use the Main Lens (Not Ultra-Wide)

Your main lens typically delivers better optical quality than the ultra-wide. Save the ultra-wide for landscapes where you have more light.

3

Stabilise the Phone

Rest the phone on a car roof, wall, or tripod. Even in Night Mode, the phone still needs a fraction of a second of exposure — any shake will blur the result.

4

Shoot in RAW If Available

RAW files retain far more detail than JPEGs and give you much more control when editing colour and brightness after the fact.

5

Expect Long Exposures

Five to ten second exposures are common. Even a faint grey glow visible to the naked eye will often appear as vivid green, pink, or purple in the captured image.

What G1 Actually Means

NOAA’s geomagnetic storm scale runs from G1 (Minor) to G5 (Extreme). Understanding where tonight’s event sits helps set the right expectations. Full scale details at NOAA SWPC.

G1
Minor ← Tonight’s Watch

Possible brief HF radio degradation; small GPS fluctuations. No severe impacts expected.

Aurora visible
to ~60° lat.
Can reach
northern U.S.
G2
Moderate

High-latitude power systems may experience voltage alarms. Some satellite orientation corrections needed.

Aurora to ~55° lat.
N. U.S./S. Canada
G3
Strong

Voltage corrections required on power systems. Satellite drag increases. Radio nav unreliable.

Aurora to ~50° lat.
Mid-U.S. states
G4
Severe

Widespread power problems possible. Satellite operations degraded. May 2024 event was G4–G5.

Aurora to ~45° lat.
Southern U.S.
G5
Extreme

Complete HF radio blackout for days. Grid and satellite disruptions. Carrington-class events.

Aurora visible
near equator

What Was Covered

This piece summarised NOAA SWPC’s G1 geomagnetic storm watch for March 6, 2026. It covered the coronal hole high-speed stream as the driver, the Russell–McPherron equinox timing factor, the states listed in NOAA’s primary and extended aurora view lines, moonlight conditions on March 6, practical dark-site and viewing guidance, smartphone photography steps, and the official real-time monitoring channels to follow. Solar Cycle 25 context from NASA and the NOAA G-scale were included to set appropriate expectations for a G1-level event.

For broader space weather and aurora context, see KarmActive’s northern lights and solar cycle coverage.

Karmactive Whatsapp group - https://www.whatsapp.com/channel/0029Vb2BWGn77qVMKpqBxg3D

Rahul Somvanshi

Rahul, possessing a profound background in the creative industry, illuminates the unspoken, often confronting revelations and unpleasant subjects, navigating their complexities with a discerning eye. He perpetually questions, explores, and unveils the multifaceted impacts of change and transformation in our global landscape. As an experienced filmmaker and writer, he intricately delves into the realms of sustainability, design, flora and fauna, health, science and technology, mobility, and space, ceaselessly investigating the practical applications and transformative potentials of burgeoning developments.

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