Get you up to speed: Canada braces for potential blackouts as solar flare approaches Earth tomorrow
A coronal mass ejection from the sunspot AR4436 categorised as an M5.8 flare has already triggered a radio blackout over the Atlantic Ocean. The Met Office indicated that this solar event may “brush” past Earth in the early hours tomorrow morning.
A coronal mass ejection from sunspot AR4436 has already caused a radio blackout over the Atlantic Ocean, as reported by the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) Space Weather Prediction Center. Jim NR Dale, a meteorologist with the British Weather Services, explained that solar flares weaken radio waves due to ionisation within the ionosphere.
The coronal mass ejection from sunspot AR4436 is expected to arrive in the early hours tomorrow, potentially resulting in northern lights sightings across northern Scotland if the skies are clear. Forecasters predict the event may cause a G1-level geomagnetic storm, although it is described as ‘minor’, meaning widespread blackouts are not anticipated.
Solar flare tomorrow could make northern lights visible | News Tech

The aurora borealis over Canada earlier this year (Picture: Reuters)
A colossal solar flare could graze the Earth tomorrow, prompting speculation of northern lights sightings and blackouts.
A coronal mass ejection – a giant solar explosion sending streams of charged particles into space – fired off the sun at 1.39pm yesterday.
Space weather forecasters (yes, they’re a thing) categorised the blast of plasma as a M5.8 (moderate) flare, the second-most powerful ranking.
The eruption from the sunspot AR4436 has already triggered a radio blackout over the Atlantic Ocean.
While it’s heading away from Earth, there’s a chance it will ‘brush’ past us in the early hours tomorrow morning, according to the Met Office.
More flares could follow as the sunspot is now rotating into Earth’s ‘strike zone’, so any ejections from it will be on a direct path towards us.
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Solar flares ‘can affect power grids and GPS’
ALERT: X-Ray Flux exceeded M5 Threshold Reached: 2026 May 10 1335 UTCNoaa Scale: R2 – ModerateComment: NOAA Scale: R2 – ModerateIssue Time: 2026 May 10 1338 UTChttps://t.co/ZbtuNtJdza
— NOAA Space Weather Prediction Center (@NWSSWPC) May 10, 2026
When solar particles hit the magnetic bubble that protects our planet from radiation, it causes a geomagnetic storm, also called a solar storm.
These particles generate electrical currents and magnetic fields. All this extra energy can damage spacecraft, pipelines and railroad tracks, as well as disrupt power grids.
Communication blackouts mainly affect methods which use high-frequency radio waves, such as ham radio and commercial aviation.
Jim NR Dale, a meteorologist with the British Weather Services, told WTX that blackouts happen because the flares weaken radio waves.
‘This is due to ionisation within the ionosphere,’ he says, referring to the fuzzy, glowing layer of the planet which meets space.
‘Basically, the waves are blocked and dispersed.

The sun spews out charged particles every now and then (Picture: Getty Images)
‘The flares in the worst-case scenarios can affect other technical apparatus such as satellites, power grid outputs and GPS.’
This probably means your phone won’t be affected by the storm, but navigation systems may be knocked out.
Earth’s magnetosphere can get peeled back, meaning satellites in high altitudes (like GPS ones) are hit with more radiation than usual.
Satellites in low-Earth orbit are better protected but can still experience technical hiccups, like signal dropouts and reboots.
Forecasters expect the arrival of tomorrow’s ejection arrival to cause a G1-level geomagnetic storm.
But Dale says this one is ‘minor’, so blackouts shouldn’t be much of a worry. ‘G4/5 are the biggies,’ he added.
GPS is also far more resilient than you might think, Lisa Dyer, executive director of the GPS Innovation Alliance, tells WTX.
‘Past experience of these events has shown us that the system continues to function normally even during intense space weather,’ she says.
‘The satellites remain safe even under extreme conditions, and we can expect operations to remain stable throughout the space weather event.’
Where can I see the northern lights?

These cosmic fireworks are ‘totally harmless’, Dale says (Picture: PA)
One pleasant potential side effect of all this solar material is a dazzling light shows in the nighttime sky.
When the particles mingle with the gases in Earth’s atmosphere, they create various colours: Oxygen creates green or red light, while blue and purple come from nitrogen.
This cosmic light show, known as the aurora borealis or northern lights, could be seen across northern Scotland tomorrow if the skies are clear enough, space forecasters say.
The monitoring service AuroraWatch UK is currently reporting no significant geomagnetic activity.
The sun’s activity ebbs and flows on an 11-year cycle and reached its peak, called solar maximum, last year. During this, the sun spits out more flares than usual.
That’s why auroras were seen as far south as London last year, as the powerful solar storms drive auroras further south.
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