...the Earth, making the dancing lights visible farther south than normal - well into the American South, according to Charles Deehr, aurora forecaster and professor emeritus of physics at the University of Alaska Fairbanks. He predicted maximum...
...year's aurora activity will be minimal, and much the same as it has been for more than a year. Aurora forecaster Charles Deehr said this is the least-active period ever experienced. The decrease in activity is attributed to slow sunspot activity...
...Mount Redoubt, the highest mountain in the Aleutians, was climbed for the first time by Jon Gardey, Eugene Wescott, Charles Deehr and Findley Dennel. In 1959, Mrs. A.A. Helda's 40-pound cabbage, an attraction for Anchorage tour buses...
...Mount Redoubt, the highest mountain in the Aleutians, was climbed for the first time by Jon Gardey, Eugene Wescott, Charles Deehr and Findley Dennel. Mrs. A.A. Helda's 40-pound cabbage, an attraction for Anchorage tour buses, was stolen...
...11-year cycle of the sunspots and solar flares that power the lights. "It's relatively quiet right now," said Charles Deehr, an auroral forecaster at the University of Alaska Fairbanks Geophysical Institute. "We're expecting them to fall...
...Stars' you can have your computer on on the side and know what the aurora will be like after the program," said Charles Deehr, professor emeritus of physics with the Geophysical Institute and one of the aurora forecasters. The Web site gets...
...getting a new look in August, receiving about 20,000 hits a month during the fall and winter aurora-viewing season. Charles Deehr, the institute's professor emeritus of physics, expects the Web site to draw even more interest now. That's...
...likely an awesome display. "These particles are energized then and slam into the atmosphere and collide," said Charles Deehr, professor emeritus of physics at the University of Alaska Fairbanks. "Then light is given off just like a neon...
...likely an awesome display. "These particles are energized then and slam into the atmosphere and collide," said Charles Deehr, professor emeritus of physics at the University of Alaska Fairbanks. "Then light is given off just like a neon...
...Mount Redoubt, the highest mountain in the Aleutians, was climbed for the first time by Jon Gardey, Eugene Wescott, Charles Deehr, and Findley Dennel. Mrs. A.A. Helda's 40-pound cabbage, an attraction for Anchorage tour buses, was stolen...
Juneau Empire ©2011. All Rights Reserved.