Beautiful photo of the Auroras.Thursday 19th of September 9.08a.m. Spring Equinox. Sunny and warm. Light 5.5 / 13kph N, Hg 28%, 19.6C / 67.3F top of 25C / 77F. Sunny. Marine wind warning.
Moon is 98.9% waning.
The bright moon dulled last night's aurora australis, but expect a spectacle with tonight's harvest supermoon
https://www.abc.net.au/news/topic/the-moon
18h ago
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Tonight's full moon will be a spectacle for skywatchers, but it was unwelcome for aurora chasers last night. (AP: Michael Probst)
Tonight's supermoon is called the harvest supermoon because the other side of the world is heading into autumn, which is typically a time for harvesting crops.
Were you lucky enough to see the aurora australis last night?
Also known as the "southern lights", the aurora is typically a spectacular light show triggered when eruptions of solar material cause geomagnetic storms in Earth's atmosphere.
The Australian Space Weather Forecasting Centre (ASWFC) issued an aurora alert yesterday afternoon, signalling to aurora hunters to head for the hills (or anywhere they could get a good view of the night sky).
While the brightness of the impending full moon may have dulled the celestial display, we've still seen a bunch of dazzling photos come through.
Here's a snap Jeff Chen took over a paddock in Callington, South Australia.
This image was taken just after 9pm ACST, when the sky was clear of clouds:
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