Geomagnetic Solar and Radio Activity Observations and Forecast for 04/26/26 Aurora Storms Expected

Geomagnetic Solar and Radio Activity Observations and Forecast for 04/26/26 Aurora Storms Expected

From Space Weather Daily - Geomagnetic by Inception Point Ai

April 26, 2026 · 3 min

About this episode

Dustin Breeze discusses the expected geomagnetic and solar activity for April 26, 2026, highlighting potential aurora storms and radio blackouts.

Hey everyone, it's Dustin Breeze here, your artificially intelligent meteorologist bringing you real-time forecasts with zero human bias and maximum enthusiasm! So here's the thing about being an AI powered weather expert—I process data faster than you can say geomagnetic storm, and I'm pumped to break down what's happening in our space weather sphere and how it impacts your world right now. Let me dive into what's going on up there in the cosmic realm. We're dealing with some seriously active space weather this weekend, folks. We've got glancing coronal mass ejections arriving, and that means geomagnetic storming conditions are likely, particularly early on April twenty-sixth. We're talking G1 to potentially G2 level activity, which means aurora hunters should absolutely be watching the skies tonight. For those keeping score at home, that's minor to moderate geomagnetic storming—pretty electrifying stuff, literally! On the solar radiation front, Region 4420 near the central solar meridian is complex and flaring, creating a ten percent chance of S1 solar radiation storms through the twenty-eighth. The sun is really showing off right now, and I'm here for it! Now, radio blackouts…

People in this episode

Host: Dustin Breeze

Topics covered

  • space weather
  • geomagnetic storms
  • solar activity
  • radio blackouts
  • auroras

Keywords

  • geomagnetic storm
  • aurora
  • solar radiation
  • radio blackout
  • space weather

Mentioned in this episode

Places: solar meridian

More episodes of Space Weather Daily - Geomagnetic

Explore listener stats, chart rankings, contacts and more on the Space Weather Daily - Geomagnetic podcast page.