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The last two times this happened (2003 and 1989) were during major solar events. This was not a major solar event.

Full story at .

The last two times this happened (2003 and 1989) were during major solar events. This was not a major solar event. Full story at [spaceweather.com](https://spaceweather.com/archive.php?view=1&day=28&month=03&year=2023).

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[–] 3 pts

Could that be related to shifting poles?

[–] 2 pts

It’s definitely related to that. The field getting weaker is what happens in the lead‐up to the solar micronova and magnetic reversal. The poles move closer to one another as the field gets weaker. They are expected to converge somewhere over the Indian Ocean before they flip and go back to full strength after the micronova.

The man pointing this out in the video is Ben Davidson, one of the main people warning us about this. His covers the story pretty well.

[–] 1 pt (edited )

Yes. Pole shifting is directly related to the weakening of the field. It is the primary factor.

That said, the borealis can also be indicative of solar activity and doesn't necessarily imply anything about Earth.