Links to sites (and sights!) on aurorae, solar-terrestrial physics,
geophysics,
and space sciences

Aurora over Kalamazoo County,
October
28, 2000
Jupiter, Saturn,
the
red giant star Aldebaran, and the star cluster known as the Pleiades
are also
visible.
-
- Earth Science Picture
of
the Day
- Solar
storms and their human impacts
- Scales
for geomagnetic
and solar radiation storms
- NASA
Space Science News
- NASA's Earth
Observatory
- Terra: NASA's Earth
Observatory
Flagship
- NASA
Space Science: the Earth's Magnetosphere
- Space Physics &
Aeronomy
Research Collaboratory
- Really neat page on
current
Solar and Auroral activity
- Some links from the Space Environment Center (1, 2, 3)
SolarMonitor.org
- Real
time solar wind data
- Maps
of Auroral Activity over the Earth
- More
Maps of Auroral Activity over the Earth
Tips on viewing Aurorae
- Space Weather Bureau
I -
latest news on Sun's activity & its impact on Earth
- Space
Weather Bureau II - latest news on Sun's activity & its impact on
Earth
- The Solar-Terrestrial
Dispatch
- Mission
to Geospace: probing the Earth-Sun connection
- Exploratorium's
Aurora Page
- Jan
Curtis' home page and beautiful Aurorae
- University
of Alaska Geophysical Institute's Aurora Page
- The
Aurora Page
- Space
Physics Interactive Data Resource
- Ice
Ages - astronomical origins?
Another
page discussing how changes in Earth's orbit and tilt affect its
climate
- A
set of pages describing the Lunar-Solar Tides
Links
to
sites describing our star, the Sun
Kirk Korista
Professor of Astronomy
Department of Physics
Western Michigan University
Kalamazoo, MI 49008-5252
last updated 14 October 2008
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