The main purpose of this ongoing blog will be to track extreme, or record temperatures related to climate change. Any reports I see of ETs will be listed below the main topic of the day. I’ll refer to extreme or record temperatures as ETs (not extraterrestrials).😉
Main Topic: Can the East Coast Snow Drought Be Linked to Climate Change?
Dear Diary. As late as the 2010s everyone was treated to great winter pictures of snow on the White House lawn or of people playing in the white stuff across Central Park New York. After 2020 new photos of these events have become quite rare. Did the advent of covid cause this absence of snow? Of course not. It probably is due to climate change. Scientists will need to assess by how much, though.
The snow drought across the megalopolis area, which extends from Washington D.C. up through Boston, will probably end at some point this winter, but with each passing day it’s record length across the area is being extended. For more details, here is a recent Washington Post article:
Mid-Atlantic and Northeast are experiencing record-long snow drought – The Washington Post
As winter nears, snow is the forgotten precipitation along East Coast
A historic snow drought is ongoing from Virginia to New York
November 28, 2023
Times Square is covered by snow during a nor’easter in Manhattan on Jan. 29, 2022. (Jeenah Moon/For The Washington Post)
From southern Virginia to New York City, nearly two years have elapsed since the last time an inch or more of snow fell on a calendar day. In several locations, the snow drought is the longest on record. The lack of snow has occurred during abnormally warm winters and amid a trend toward declining amounts of snow — both probable consequences of human-caused climate change.
New York’s Central Park received an inch of snow on one calendar day 652 days ago, its longest streak without that much snow in records dating to 1869. In the Washington region, Dulles International Airport has a similar record-long streak ongoing.
Inside a historically snowless winter in the Mid-Atlantic and Northeast
Even typically cold and snowy places in the parts of the Northeast are not receiving the amount of snow to which they are accustomed. Boston and Pittsburgh, for example, have not recorded more than 3 inches of snow on a calendar day in almost two years.
The burning question is whether these streaks of snowlessness will end in the weeks and months ahead.
The Northeast snow drought, by the numbers
Feb. 13, 2022, was the last time New York’s Central Park recorded more than an inch of snow in a day, and it was a mere 1.6 inches. Its record-setting 652-day streak is 269 days longer than the next-longest streak, which spanned 1997 and 1998.
Longest streaks without one day featuring a 1 inch or greater snowfall in New York City’s Central Park:
DATES | STREAK LENGTH |
---|---|
Feb. 14, 2022 to Nov. 27, 2023 | 652 days |
March 4, 1997 to March 21, 1998 | 383 days |
Jan. 17, 1954 to Feb. 1, 1955 | 381 days |
Feb. 7, 1985 to Jan. 27, 1986 | 355 days |
Jan. 26, 1988 to Jan. 5, 1989 | 346 days |
March 8, 1899 to Feb. 16, 1900 | 346 days |
Feb. 18, 1986 to Jan. 18, 1987 | 335 days |
April 13, 1918 to March 13, 1919 | 335 days |
Feb. 5, 1913 to Jan. 4, 1914 | 334 days |
March 3, 2006 to Jan. 29, 2007 | 333 days |
Feb. 27, 1991 to Jan. 25, 1992 | 333 days |
Central Park’s weather records begin in January 1869. The top streak was ongoing at publish.
Source: Applied Climate Information System IAN LIVINGSTON THE WASHINGTON POST
The Big Apple is far from alone. Many Mid-Atlantic locations have similar streaks.
In the Washington area, Dulles Airport’s streak is 625 days and counting. Baltimore, with a streak of 668 days, is closing in on the record of 672 days that ended in late December 2012.
Some other locations that have registered historically long periods without a calendar-day inch of snow include:
- Philadelphia: 667 days, the city’s longest on record
- Lynchburg, Va.: 680 days, second-longest
- Wallops Island, Va.: 667 days, third-longest
- Richmond: 681 days, fourth-longest
- Washington: 680 days, fifth-longest
Mary Molitor walks past Lincoln Park in D.C. on March 12, 2022, during one of the recent meager snowfalls. (Amanda Andrade-Rhoades for The Washington Post)
North and west of the above locations, places that are colder and snowier also have experienced major snow deficits. They have encountered unusually long periods without at least 3 inches of snow falling in a calendar day. Those places include:
- Elkins, W.Va.: 625 days (without 3 inches in a calendar day), third longest on record
- Boston: 640 days, third-longest
- Pittsburgh: 625 days, fourth-longest
- Islip, N.Y.: 652 days, fourth-longest
- Allentown, Pa.: 625 days, fifth-longest
These streaks have reached historic levels largely because of last winter, when snow amounts for the full winter were minuscule:
- Washington received 0.4 inches, third-least on record.
- Philadelphia received 0.3 inches, a tie for the second-least on record with 2019-2020.
- Manhattan’s Central Park received 2.3 inches, its lowest amount on record.
- Boston received 12.4 inches, fourth-least on record and more than 3 feet below average.
The lack of snow last winter extended a longer period of snowlessness. In Washington, 3 of the past 4 winters have brought below-average snow, including two with hardly any. In Philadelphia, New York and Boston, snowfall has been below average in 4 of the past 5 winters.
Improved snow prospects?
Even amid a warming climate and trends toward less snow, these streaks should not last forever. And this winter presents a strong opportunity for the streaks to end.
The increased snow prospects stem from the ongoing El Niño climate pattern, which tends to increase winter moisture in the South and Mid-Atlantic.
Historically, some of the Mid-Atlantic’s snowiest winters have occurred during El Niños, although some El Niños end up being so mild that little snow falls.
In the Northeast, Appalachians and Ohio Valley, moisture is sometimes harder to come by during El Niños. But even in these areas, there’s a somewhat elevated risk for a large snowstorm.
The long streaks without significant snowfall will become more probable in a warming world, particularly in the Mid-Atlantic, where temperatures often are only marginally low enough to support frozen precipitation. Just a little warming will mean that more precipitation falls as rain. Farther north and northwest, many areas will remain cold enough for snow to hang on longer.
By Ian Livingston Ian Livingston is a forecaster/photographer and information lead for the Capital Weather Gang. By day, Ian is a defense and national security researcher at a D.C. think tank. Twitter
Here are more “ET’s” recorded from around the planet the last couple of days, their consequences, and some extreme temperature outlooks, as well as any extreme precipitation reports:
This 1 December will be remembered as one of the most extreme day in climatic history
— Extreme Temperatures Around The World (@extremetemps) December 1, 2023
Records falling in all Continents, in dozens countries, in thousands stations
SOUTH AMERICA also had its share
Temperatures >40C in BRAZIL beat several December records (including Salinas again) pic.twitter.com/6OAwNxssfi
Incredible warmth in #Nunavut with many *monthly* records destroyed today.
— Thierry Goose (@ThierryGooseBC) December 2, 2023
🌡️5.4°C Grise Fiord [31°C above average]
🌡️2.3°C Arctic Bay
🌡️1.7°C Pond Inlet
🌡️-1.3°C Resolute
No monthly records below but very high temperatures.
🌡️-0.1°C Sanirajak/Hall Beach
🌡️-3.0°C Alert#NUstorm pic.twitter.com/qov9YrjqB2
December started few hours ago and records are already falling allover.
— Extreme Temperatures Around The World (@extremetemps) December 1, 2023
From INDONESIA
36.8 Maumere
36.0 Kaimana
to PHILIPPINES
36.2 San Jose
to THAILAND
35.8C Trat
…tbc… pic.twitter.com/DF2PE6LBRU
Few hours into December and the first records already fell:
— Extreme Temperatures Around The World (@extremetemps) December 1, 2023
In the PHILIPPINES minimum temperatures up to 27.5C at Dipolog and several other records of highest Minimums for December broken including Manila Aquino Airport with 26.8C. pic.twitter.com/IVLGxEzAHo
【🌡️Tmax in #Sapporo🇯🇵 was the 🥶lowest for November in 36 years !】
— Tomoki Suzuki (@StabilizClimate) November 30, 2023
Today, 30/11/2023, the Tmax in Sapporo was 🌡️-3.2°C, the 🥶lowest November Tmax in 36 years since 28/11/1987, when it was -4.7°C (the lowest November Tmax ever recorded).https://t.co/sEyRImsum2 pic.twitter.com/F925KrK7dF
Howard Davis Farm recorded a total of 328.7mm of rain in November 2023. This is provisionally the highest amount of rain reported at any of our observing sites in Jersey, for any month across all the years that we've been observing the weather. pic.twitter.com/9J2WeXZi7E
— Jersey Met (@Jersey_Met) December 1, 2023
Next week will be a good example of how, despite record global warmth, it can still be very cold locally.
— Mika Rantanen (@mikarantane) December 1, 2023
To be honest, it's been a while since the ECMWF weekly forecast showed the lowest colour scale for Finland (more than 10°C below normal). pic.twitter.com/A8ZecuUNPO
Let's check in and see how much December temperatures have changed over the last 75 years. 🔥🔥🔥 pic.twitter.com/GiQGqFvbFp
— Brian Brettschneider (@Climatologist49) December 2, 2023
Here is new November 2023 climatology:
Japan had its warmest fall for both land & ocean (SST), with monthly avg temps 1.39℃ and 1.2℃ higher than average, respectively. This marks the third consecutive season of record-breaking heat for land, following the exceptionally hot spring and summerhttps://t.co/qLvCsQKSA8 pic.twitter.com/aSS6xVyaBC
— Sayaka Mori (@sayakasofiamori) December 1, 2023
November 2023 was a top 5 driest (since 1895) for large parts of the central U.S. according to Prism climate data. Some areas even saw their record driest November. Only a few small areas were notably wet in November. pic.twitter.com/roUuR1zp5S
— Brian Brettschneider (@Climatologist49) December 1, 2023
November 2023 was very warm in the Prairies and the northern territories, but cooler than normal in southeastern #Canada. Newfoundland (YQX & YYT) had its coldest November since 1992, while it was the warmest on record in Clyde River, NU, beating Nov 2010. #wxtwitter pic.twitter.com/RqgG0RMFGD
— Patrick Duplessis (@Pat_wx) December 1, 2023
Contributing to 3rd warmest Spring on record, November in #Australia was warm and fairly wet.
— Cameron H 🇦🇺 (@Hitchy04) December 1, 2023
The mean temp was 1.58c above the 1961-90 avg- 9th warmest on record. Esp hot in SW WA again.
Rainfall was 37.8% above avg. Wet in eastern interior, but very dry in Tas & NE tropics. pic.twitter.com/c380PgKQAb
November 2023 in #Germany had an average temperature of 5.66C,+0.73C above average.
— Extreme Temperatures Around The World (@extremetemps) December 1, 2023
Average precipitation was 117.4mm, 198.3% of normal.
Autumn had an average temperature of 11.52C,+2.06C above normal and was the 2nd warmest after 2006.
Maps by Bernd Hussing. pic.twitter.com/poJccihVdL
November 2023 in #Austria had an average temperature matching the 1991-2020 normal: colder in the Alps, warmer in the Northeast.
— Extreme Temperatures Around The World (@extremetemps) December 1, 2023
It was 92% wetter than average.
Autumn 2023 was +2.4C above normal and was the warmest on records.
Map by ZAMG. pic.twitter.com/xjbEdp3OfS
November 2023 in Switzerland had a temperature anomaly of +0.1C above normal. Colder than average in the South, warmer in the North.
— Extreme Temperatures Around The World (@extremetemps) December 1, 2023
It was the 4th wettest November on record.
Autumn had a +2.5C anomaly and tied 2006 as the warmest on records.
Maps by Ubimet. pic.twitter.com/oSCYb4rfDk
November 2023 in Antarctic Vostok Station was exceptionally cold:coldest since 1983 and 2nd coldest overall.
— Extreme Temperatures Around The World (@extremetemps) December 1, 2023
In the SOUTH POLE Station the average was -38.4C, which is 1.2C below the reference period 1991-2020 https://t.co/NeIFA7dSUA
More news and notes from COP28:
Our Chair, @JimSkeaIPCC, addressed the #COP28 high-level opening yesterday.
— IPCC (@IPCC_CH) December 1, 2023
“The scientific community is ready to support the outcomes of #COP28 in shaping #ClimateAction based on science. But science by itself is no substitute for action.”
🔗 https://t.co/Phgjqjr27P pic.twitter.com/ZxUxV67kqa
My message to leaders at #COP28:
— António Guterres (@antonioguterres) December 1, 2023
Protecting our climate is the world’s greatest test of leadership.
I urge you to lead.
Humanity’s fate hangs in the balance.
Make this climate conference count.
"The 1.5-degree limit is only possible if we ultimately stop burning all fossil fuels.
— UN Climate Change (@UNFCCC) December 1, 2023
Not reduce.
Not abate.
Phaseout."@UN Secretary General @antonioguterres | #COP28 pic.twitter.com/keeocNL67w
The UNEP #COP28 Pavilion is now open! Join us for insightful discussions on methane mitigation, climate finance, sustainable cooling, nature-based solutions, adaptation, and more.
— UN Environment Programme (@UNEP) December 1, 2023
Whether you're in person or online, be a part of the conversation: https://t.co/sXPlpgWsKU pic.twitter.com/zpKJ9hZqsL
Three unelected representatives of a democracy fly in separate private jets to a petrostate to be greeted by a Big Oil CEO before spouting their rambling nonsense on climate change. Is this the best our species can muster when facing a climate emergency!https://t.co/6M0tnTJE83
— Kevin Anderson (@KevinClimate) December 1, 2023
yes because this climate summit is not being held in good faith. it is not a real climate summit it’s now just another fossil fuel industry delay tactic taking us deeper into irreversible planetary heating for their short-term profits https://t.co/Xo5xNxMowM
— Peter Kalmus (@ClimateHuman) December 1, 2023
As usual, @emorwee is very smart. "COP28 sucks: Pay Attention Anyway."https://t.co/kKDQ2IUtbk
— Bill McKibben (@billmckibben) November 30, 2023
Q&A: What is the ‘global stocktake’ and could it accelerate climate action? | @aruna_sekhar @Josh_Gabbatiss w/ comment from @aygoswami @e3g @SandeepChamling @JenIrisAllan @bforboseman Lavanya Rajamani
— Carbon Brief (@CarbonBrief) December 1, 2023
Read here: https://t.co/A7r3OAHuUp#COP28 pic.twitter.com/3SInOyjJU4
The distant future, long after the COP climate meetings. https://t.co/pErHRnGohH pic.twitter.com/8Su0Cg82Gp
— Dr. William J. Ripple (@WilliamJRipple) December 1, 2023
Here is More Climate and Weather News from Friday:
(As usual, this will be a fluid post in which more information gets added during the day as it crosses my radar, crediting all who have put it on-line. Items will be archived on this site for posterity. In most instances click on the pictures of each tweet to see each article. The most noteworthy items will be listed first.)
"From climate leadership to oil drilling: Biden’s green pragmatism one year before the election" by Maria Antonio Sanchez-Vallejo for El Pais (@elpais_america)https://t.co/ysNGDGctk7
— Prof Michael E. Mann (@MichaelEMann) December 2, 2023
The World Meteorological Organization provisional report on the State of the Global Climate in 2023 is out: https://t.co/fAFNEc7dCy
— Zack Labe (@ZLabe) December 1, 2023
"Greenhouse gas levels are record high. Global temperatures are record high. Sea level rise is record high…" ➡️ https://t.co/nZ5lNuxkaf #COP28 pic.twitter.com/KxUpCxzeIF
This is SO important 👇 The idea that nations are the only or even the primary actors when it comes to climate action is just not true. There is so much that can be done at every level and every voice counts. https://t.co/JLhM3YtWtH
— The Real Prof. Katharine Hayhoe (@KHayhoe) December 1, 2023
#ClimateFriday Reading: “We won’t be able to protect people in Latin America from climate change if professional disinformers keep manipulating weather disasters…"#Climatechange misinformation in Latin America threatens efforts to combat it https://t.co/C1cMeO5SGZ via @nbcnews
— Silicon Valley North (@CCLSVN) December 1, 2023
New study shows potency of the greenhouse gas increases with increased concentrations
— Jeff Berardelli (@WeatherProf) November 30, 2023
“Future increases in CO2 will provide a more potent warming effect on climate than an equivalent increase in the past” https://t.co/XHTACvLHgv
#Arctic sea ice extent is currently the 4th lowest on record (JAXA data)
— Zack Labe (@ZLabe) December 1, 2023
• about 280,000 km² below the 2010s mean
• about 770,000 km² below the 2000s mean
• about 1,470,000 km² below the 1990s mean
• about 1,980,000 km² below the 1980s mean
Plots: https://t.co/tBkW5GBOxd pic.twitter.com/boq05Dt6TB
After years of drought left soils unable to absorb moisture, severe flooding has killed dozens of people and continues to wipe out entire villages, displacing 746,000 people in Somalia, more than 396,000 in Ethiopia, and more than 450,000 in Kenya.
— Mike Hudema (@MikeHudema) December 1, 2023
We must #ActOnClimate#Cop28 pic.twitter.com/yDF2Pqq2pB
Ocean Heat Content data confirms @NASA's record high Earth Energy Imbalance!
— Leon Simons (@LeonSimons8) December 1, 2023
For the past three years (IAP/CAS) OHC (in 10 ZJ) indicates a global Energy imbalance of +1.5 W/m².
And for the past year an Energy Imbalance of >2.0W/m²!
Source: @Lijing_Chenghttps://t.co/Uw9L1Skk2D pic.twitter.com/thCfm4FTYS
Stop or eat less meat
— GO GREEN (@ECOWARRIORSS) November 30, 2023
Industrial farming is not only cruel but also produces 14.5% of global greenhouse gas emissions
Cattle farming occupies 41% of all land in https://t.co/acOtZ9XK2X even though 99% of livestock raised on factory farm concentration camps https://t.co/xLQ8MPzEHv pic.twitter.com/TuhXwsWeK6
#Arctic sea ice has been unusually slow to reform across the Hudson Bay (Canada) so far this freeze season…
— Zack Labe (@ZLabe) December 1, 2023
Each line represents one year from 1979 (purple) to 2022 (white). 2023 is in red. Data from @NSIDC. pic.twitter.com/yZ0Kz0P21j
Wildfires could be triple Canada’s industrial emissions. But they’re excluded from the official carbon tally. – The Globe and Mail https://t.co/cG985RUtYx
— Paul Beckwith (@PaulHBeckwith) December 1, 2023
The hits keep coming.
— Prof. Eliot Jacobson (@EliotJacobson) December 1, 2023
Global sea surface temperatures are nearing record anomaly territory again. pic.twitter.com/ZQoTOnLq63
Today’s News on Sustainable Energy, Traditional Polluting Energy from Fossil Fuel, and the Green Revolution:
The world just doubled installed solar capacity in a mere 18 months
— Assaad Razzouk (@AssaadRazzouk) December 1, 2023
Because solar power is the cheapest source of electricity in historyhttps://t.co/DZ0xGFvQGs #climate #momentum pic.twitter.com/aYidNMpnvS
'A New Study Proves E-Bikes Are Pretty Damn Great for the Future of Humanity' https://t.co/I4dDbkXhtG pic.twitter.com/Re9oCljNXY
— Jake Reyna (@iJakeReyna) December 1, 2023
Ironically, the #GreatBarrierReef is a superhighway for exporting fossil fuels, contributing to the decline of the Reef due to greenhouse gas pollution.
— Terry Hughes (@ProfTerryHughes) December 1, 2023
The Australian & Queensland governments are continuing to enable & subsidise this industry, despite acknowledging the dangers. pic.twitter.com/wordbWAFT4
More from the Weather Department:
NHC has issued the final Monthly Tropical Weather Summary to close out the 2023 eastern North Pacific hurricane season.
— NHC Eastern Pacific (@NHC_Pacific) December 1, 2023
The season was near-normal in terms of named storms (17), but was above-normal for hurricanes (10) & major hurricanes (8).
Info: https://t.co/VgNQFtBttR pic.twitter.com/TeI0pHxoFn
I'll say #Gert was an interesting TC.
— Philippe Papin (@pppapin) November 30, 2023
The 1st TC to form in August, then meandered as a remnant low/trough, finally reforming 10 days later much further north.
It made up a traffic jam of four 4 TCs in a 20×20 degree area on September 1st (though Idalia was post-tropical). https://t.co/V9jCjsqCPB pic.twitter.com/TTeNyflkvH
Bye bye bye, bye bye hurricane season 👋🌀
— AccuWeather (@accuweather) November 30, 2023
The Atlantic basin had 20 named storms in 2023, ranking fourth for the most named storms in a year since 1950. pic.twitter.com/rc3dTX119G
Rainfall totals expected through the weekend for the SE. Heavy totals along the upper Gulf for sure. Rain trains will bring several inches in spots. Lower Florida misses out. https://t.co/Hk3pbO7x8H pic.twitter.com/3nfSlFHOKL
— Mike's Weather Page (@tropicalupdate) December 1, 2023
The main weather event(s) for the first week of December will be the daily onslaught of precipitation for the Pac NW. Many alerts have been posted already by NWS. Changing snow levels, snow melting, and rising rivers will bring on additional hydrology concerns with each event.… pic.twitter.com/yOuigzoKye
— Jim Cantore (@JimCantore) December 1, 2023
As suspected, the JTWC has given a high chance of formation on #95B. Areas from #TamilNadu to #Odisha need to watch this as a tropical cyclone brews & heads into that general direction. The main threat will be the rainfall. The next name on the list is #Michaung. #tropicswx https://t.co/BXtdgy3O8g pic.twitter.com/yIKRSTd65b
— Vortix (@VortixWx) December 1, 2023
Just a casual swim through 33" inches of snow in New York. 🏊❄️ pic.twitter.com/0w1tleML7B
— AccuWeather (@accuweather) November 30, 2023
SNOW IN HAWAII! ❄️🌴 It's a winter wonderland right now at the summits of the Big Island with 5" of new snow on the ground today along with subfreezing temps! Credit: Mauna Kea Weather Center #Hawaii #Snow @stormhour pic.twitter.com/3c3uGyEq7o
— Matt Devitt (@MattDevittWX) November 30, 2023
Who's ready for some clouds? Winter is the cloudiest season of the year in most of the Contiguous U.S. ☁️ pic.twitter.com/y6w3RfDMd8
— Brian Brettschneider (@Climatologist49) December 1, 2023
Looks to me like the ECMWF, GFS & Canadian models have all come around to forecasting a stretched #polarvortex for mid-December. No signs of a related pattern in the troposphere, i.e., #cold air on the move across North America, but will models adjust in this direction with time? pic.twitter.com/NeRf3rBtLP
— Judah Cohen (@judah47) December 1, 2023
(1/2)
— NWS Hastings (@NWSHastings) December 1, 2023
We at NWS Hastings have some very sad news to share – our Meteorologist-In-Charge (MIC) Phillip Poyner passed away unexpectedly late last week.
Please keep Phil’s family, friends, and the entire NWS community in your thoughts and prayers during this difficult time. pic.twitter.com/oCIGamTs4y
More on the Environment and Nature:
“Shocking revelation: Nearly 1 million stillbirths annually linked to #airpollution, per global study. Nearly half of these tragedies connect to tiny, yet deadly PM2.5 particles from #fossilfuel combustion. Time to reconsider our environmental impact for the sake of future… pic.twitter.com/JaTtczzHmo
— Dr. Mustafa Santiago Ali 🇧🇷 🇪🇹 🇵🇷🇯🇲🤙🏾 (@EJinAction) December 1, 2023
The climate crisis is spiraling out of our control. 1000s of fish washed up dead this summer in the Gulf of Mexico because the water was too hot to hold oxygen.
— Mike Hudema (@MikeHudema) November 30, 2023
We can't solve this crisis if we keep expanding the problem. #ActOnClimate#StopFracking #climate #Cop28 @Dave_Eby pic.twitter.com/nWdoZLoWew
Good morning humankind.Our remaining forests are invaluable resources for biodiversity and climate stability. As #COP28 commences,we must denounce deforestation and work towards sustainable practices to preserve these precious ecosystems. #SustainOurForests pic.twitter.com/BdZRF59LDI
— Tangwa Abilu.🌿🌏🌾🍀🍃.SDG's. (@AbiluTangwa) December 1, 2023
"Human hunger is the enemy of our forests. When we help local people to plant forests and manage them sustainably, we also create jobs and prosperity. That is why the way out of the climate crisis leads directly to our forests," demanded DFWR President Georg Schirmbeck.💚🌳🌲🍀💚 pic.twitter.com/GOAiMO1cJH
— Green is a mission (@Greenisamissio1) December 1, 2023
The world’s forests absorb 2.4 billion tonnes of carbon dioxide a year, meaning reversing the effects of #deforestation is essential in the fight against #ClimateChange.
— UN Biodiversity (@UNBiodiversity) December 1, 2023
#COP28
Via @IUCN pic.twitter.com/paIMXGnQgz
More on Other Science and the Beauty of Earth and this Universe:
OSIRIS-APEX (the spacecraft formerly known as OSIRIS-REx) is about to face its first test in its extended mission to asteroid Apophis. It will fly close to the Sun, exposing its components to higher temperatures than they were designed to endure. https://t.co/kYUhEoMKV5 pic.twitter.com/IWJHp7fQXF
— NASA Solar System (@NASASolarSystem) December 1, 2023
— NOAA Space Weather (@NWSSWPC) December 1, 2023
The strong Geomagnetic Storm arrived after all the nighttime satellite overpasses so we don't have good Aurora imagery from space, but many enjoyed the Northern Lights just before sunrise. This view from northern Wisconsin. Happy #December1st! https://t.co/KrTPQ2I1P2
— UW-Madison CIMSS (@UWCIMSS) December 1, 2023
The Aurora really put on a show this morning here in Floodwood, Minnesota.
— Live Storm Chasers (@LiveStormChaser) December 1, 2023
These beautiful Northern Lights danced through the sky for some time.
What a wonderful trip and so worth the drive!
LSC/Freddie Bryant pic.twitter.com/RmIvKtrGua
WOW! Northern Lights seen early this morning from Lake City, Minnesota. Photo courtesy of Manda Hart Baldwin. #Aurora #NorthernLights pic.twitter.com/6uiVrjklu4
— Mark Tarello (@mark_tarello) December 1, 2023
A peaceful, relaxing good evening, a blessed night and a good start in the weekend to my beloved and much appreciated fellow inhabitants of the wonderful planet Earth with a dear greeting from my home. Stay kind and healthy. May God bless you.❤️💙💚🌱☘️🌿🌳🌲🍀💚 pic.twitter.com/nToSGl2sRC
— Green is a mission (@Greenisamissio1) December 1, 2023