Fascinating isn't it, and to think, it took an amateur to photograph and report this, which begs the question, why aren't our government funded NASA scientists reporting these cyclic events also?
I guess because anything which detracts from their "climate Change" agenda, is no longer worthy of making MSM headlines?
The chances of a disruption from space are getting stronger because the sun is entering the most active period of its 11 to 12-year natural cycle. The last solar maximum occurred in 2001.
The world got a taster of the sun's explosive power last month when the strongest solar eruption in five years sent a torrent of charged plasma hurtling towards the world at 580 miles per second.
The storm created spectacular aurorae and disrupted radio communications.
Space storms are not new. The first major solar flare was recorded by British astronomer Richard Carrington in 1859.
Other solar geomagnetic storms have been observed in recent decades.
One huge solar flare in 1972 cut off long-distance telephone communication in the mid-western state of Illinois, Nasa said.
Another similar flare in 1989 'provoked geomagnetic storms that disrupted electric power transmission' and caused blackouts across the Canadian province of Quebec, the U.S. space agency said.