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- Aurorasaurus - Reporting Auroras from the Ground Up
Aurorasaurus is a citizen science site where you can report sightings of the aurora The site contains forecasts of the Northern Lights, user-reported aurora sightings along with Tweets and photographs of the aurora borealis
- Aurorasaurus - NASA Science
Help track auroras around the world with the Aurorasaurus project! Each verified report of an aurora serves as a valuable data point for scientists who model these phenomena Receive community alerts when the aurora is sighted near you Take and share pictures of aurora #DoNASAScience by helping to track rare auroras like STEVEs
- Aurorasaurus | CitizenScience. gov
Aurorasaurus is the first citizen science project that aggregates relatively rare sightings of the Northern and Southern Lights in order to improve real-time tracking and understanding of the beautiful phenomenon
- Aurorasaurus - NASA
Aurorasaurus is to spot the aurora and report it Your report will help others see it too! Volunteers use the website, iOS, or Android apps to get alerts, help find real-time sightings from social media, learn about the aurora and more National Science Foundation INSPIRE program Co-PI and founder is a NASA Goddard civil servant
- Aurorasaurus - Wikipedia
Aurorasaurus is a citizen science project which tracks auroras through crowdsourced observations from a mobile app and social media, namely Twitter and Facebook
- Aurorasaurus - The Polar Citizen Science Collective
You can participate in aurora citizen science with Aurorasaurus This award-winning project tracks auroras around the world via reports on its website and on Twitter Using aurora-related tweets and reports, it generates a real-time, global map of the Northern Lights Citizen scientists can also log in and verify the tweets
- Aurorasaurus - AECO
About Tracks auroras around the world in real time Using aurora-related tweets and reports, it generates global map of the Northern Lights More Information
- Aurorasaurus Roars During Historic Solar Storm - Science@NASA
The largest geomagnetic storm in 21 years lit up the sky last weekend, and NASA’s volunteers were ready Between May 10th and 12th 2024, NASA’s Aurorasaurus project received an unprecedented number of reports from around the world It also helped eager aurora chasers get a better view
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