Nos qui vive in le medio latitudes ha un possibilitate de vider leaurora borealis. --Julio Scientists Say Solar Flare Could Disrupt Power Saturday, July 15, 2000 WASHINGTON (Reuters) - A huge solar flare produced by a large sunspot group is expected to produce a geomagnetic storm that could disrupt electric power grids and satellite operations, U.S. government scientists predicted. The flare spewed out billions of tons of plasma and charged particles Friday that are expected to reach the Earth's magnetic field when it is Saturday afternoon on the U.S. East Coast, the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) said... The solar activity also should give mid-latitude areas, including the U.S. cities of Washington, New York, Denver and Seattle a good chance of seeing the Aurora Borealis on Saturday night through Sunday morning, the center said. traduction del secunde paragrapho: Le activitate solar anque debe dar al areas in le medio latitudes, includente le citates american de Washington, Nova York, Denver e Seattle un bon possibilitate de vider le Aurora Borealis le nocte de Saturday/Sunday, le National Administration Oceanic e Atmospheric [un parte del governmento national del Statos Unite] ha dicite O love, O glory, what are ye that fly About us ever, rarely to alight There's not a meteor in the polar sky Of such transcendent or more fleeting flight... And such as they are such my present tale is A nondescript and ever varying rhyme A versified Aurora Borealis Which flashes o'er a waste and icy clime When we know what all are we must bewail us But ne'ertheless I hope it is no crime To laugh at all things for I wish to know What after all are all things but a show? --Byron, "Don Juan," Canto VII, stanzas 1 & 2