Northern lights, known for glowing red and green colors, could be visible this week across northern US

If you live across portions of the northern U.S., keep your eyes to the sky over the next few nights: Barring pesky clouds, you might catch a peek of the northern lights, aka the aurora borealis.

According to SpaceWeather.com, auroras could be sighted in northern-tier U.S. states from Maine to Montana to Washington this week.

The colorful event is courtesy of a solar flare, which erupted out of a sunspot Monday. A coronal mass ejection – a burst of plasma from the sun – was also heading toward the Earth, and it arrived early Thursday.

NOAA's Space Weather Prediction Center said that the coronal mass ejection began interacting with the Earth's magnetic field early Thursday. The electromagnetic storm was expected to grow to major status Thursday, extending the area where the northern lights are visible.

So Thursday night might end up being the best night to see the northern lights.

The northern lights in Alaska.
The northern lights in Alaska.

The center issued a geomagnetic storm watch, saying a Level G3 or “strong” storm is possible here on Earth on Thursday.

The aurora forms when the particles flowing from the sun get caught up in the Earth's magnetic field. The particles interact with molecules of atmospheric gases to cause the famed glowing red and green colors of the aurora.

The lights are visible in both the far northern and southern parts of the world. The southern lights are known as the aurora australis.

Contributing: Bill Steiden, The Des Moines Register

Worlds align this winter solstice: Look for Jupiter, Saturn in December skies

This article originally appeared on USA TODAY: Northern lights: See aurora borealis across northern US states