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LIVE Where YOU Live Contest

LIVE Where YOU Live Contest

CBS Newsa day ago

CBS Colorado is taking the First Alert Weather Tracker all across Colorado this summer, including your neighborhood. Enter our contest and tell us what makes your community unique for a chance to win:
- A visit from a First Alert Weather Team member to your very own front yard (where they will deliver the weather live on air!)
- An ice cream social for up to 50 people!
This contest ends on June 20.

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Road closures expected as almost 600K pound ‘superload' moves through Miami Valley
Road closures expected as almost 600K pound ‘superload' moves through Miami Valley

Yahoo

time30 minutes ago

  • Yahoo

Road closures expected as almost 600K pound ‘superload' moves through Miami Valley

Drivers will need to look for an alternative route as a 'superload' moves through part of the Miami Valley today. [DOWNLOAD: Free WHIO-TV News app for alerts as news breaks] We explain how long crews expect this trip to last, and the changes drivers should expect today on News Center 7 Daybreak from 4:25 a.m. until 7 a.m. TRENDING STORIES: Have you seen her? Police searching for missing 40-year-old woman Ohio lawmakers react to Israel attacking Iran's nuclear, missile sites Motorcyclist injured trying to avoid hitting deer in Darke County As previously reported by News Center 7, Piqua Steel Company will move an electric transformer from the Fairborn Railroad site to an AES substation on Dayton Xenia Road, according to the Greene County Engineer's Office. The transformer weighs over 369,000 pounds. The total weight of the truck will be almost 600,000 pounds with the transformer loaded up. The transformer will be escorted by law enforcement on the following route: West on E Xenia Dr. to E. Dayton Dr. Southwest on E. Dayton Dr. to OH-444S (S. Central Ave./ Kauffman Ave.) Southeast on OH-444S to W. Dayton Yellow Springs Rd. South on W. Dayton Yellow Springs Rd. to Trebein Rd. South Trebein Rd. to Dayton Xenia Rd. Dayton Xenia Rd to the substation News Center 7's Mason Fletcher says there will be a moving road closure starting at 9 a.m. Updates will be posted on the Greene County Engineer's social media. [SIGN UP: WHIO-TV Daily Headlines Newsletter]

Northern Lights Forecast: ‘Strong' Storm Could See Aurora In 18 U.S. States This Weekend
Northern Lights Forecast: ‘Strong' Storm Could See Aurora In 18 U.S. States This Weekend

Forbes

timean hour ago

  • Forbes

Northern Lights Forecast: ‘Strong' Storm Could See Aurora In 18 U.S. States This Weekend

Photographic aurora are possible in the U.S. this weekend. The Northern Lights may be visible on camera — and possibly to the naked eye — in the U.S. as soon as it gets dark on Saturday, June 14, according to the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration's Space Weather Prediction Center, with forecasts including a "strong" geomagnetic storm that could be visible from 18 U.S. states. Solar activity is currently at a 23-year high due to the current solar maximum period. The latest forecast has a G2 (moderate) geomagnetic storm on June 14. However, NOAA states that there's a slight chance for a G3 (strong) geomagnetic storm — and that's why this forecast is worth knowing about. 'Aurora has been seen as low as Illinois and Oregon (typically 50° geomagnetic latitude),' according to NOAA, though its aurora view line has the phenomenon potentially visible from parts of 18 states. Parts of U.S. states that could potentially see aurora, according to NOAA, include Washington, northern Oregon, northern Idaho, Montana, Wyoming, North Dakota, South Dakota, Nebraska, Minnesota, northern Iowa, Wisconsin, northern Illinois, northern Indiana, Michigan, New York, Vermont, New Hampshire and Maine. Check NOAA's 30-minute forecast or use the Glendale App for up-to-the-minute forecasts. All forecasts for the Northern Lights must now be viewed with suspicion. Late June is not traditionally considered the aurora-viewing season in the Northern Hemisphere, which is typically thought to be from September to March. That's because there are now so few hours of darkness, with no astronomical darkness around the U.S.-Canada border and farther north. Although aurora can occasionally be seen in deep twilight, the display needs to be strong and the timing of outbursts fortunate. Breathless forecasts have persisted through April, May, and June, partly due to inexperienced reporters and partly because the current solar maximum is experiencing repeated heightened activity from the sun. It's best to think of the Northern Lights in June as a photographic opportunity. Although you may see some structure with the naked eye, having a mirrorless or DSLR camera is the way to go — though newer models of flagship smartphones also do an excellent job of capturing aurora. If your smartphone has a 'Night Mode' feature, that should be good enough to get a more than impressive souvenir shot of the aurora. It likely means a long exposure of between five and 10 seconds, which will look much better if you do three things: The Northern Lights are caused by the solar wind, a stream of charged particles from the sun interacting with Earth's magnetic field. Although the magnetic field deflects much of it, some charged particles accelerate along the magnetic field lines toward the polar regions, where they collide with oxygen and nitrogen atoms, exciting them and causing them to release energy as light. The forecast takes into account the effect of a coronal mass ejection — a burst of charged particles from the sun traveling through space and striking Earth's magnetosphere — on June 8. A coronal hole in the sun is also causing a high-speed, turbulent solar wind. Wishing you clear skies and wide eyes.

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