Aurora Now - Northern Lights is a weather app developed by VNIL AB. The last update, v2.50, released on September 19, 2024, and it’s rated 4.62 out of 5 based on the latest 593 reviews. Aurora Now - Northern Lights is FREE and requires iOS 16.2+ and Android 15.2 or newer to download.
Aurora alerts and forecast
Video: Aurora Now Overview
Description
Aurora Now: Your Ultimate Northern Lights Companion
Experience the Magic of the Aurora Borealis with Aurora Now! Eager to witness the awe-inspiring Northern Lights? Look no further!
Want to enjoy Aurora Now - Northern Lights on your desktop? Download the latest APK (2.50, 25 MB) or choose your preferred version, and follow our Bluestacks emulator guide for easy installation on Windows or macOS. For any assistance with downloading or installing APK files, feel free to visit our forums!
User Reviews and Ratings
★★★★☆Needs a Tutorial
It took a lot of effort to find out what “Bt” was, by searching websites. Still not sure about it as an alert value because what I found was: it’s the B-angle and that’s optimum in March and September. That can’t be it! We don’t need an alert that it’s March or September!!! Please advise. Thanks.
★★★★★The best app for northern lights
It’s the best app to let you know when to be ready for the lights
★★☆☆☆good idea, not very accurate, in my experience, others we have better luck
I live in Minnesota and roughly the middle of the state. We see the lights from time to time during strong, solar events. They can push down to the midpoint of Minnesota. I have seen them three times since getting this app, but not because the app helped. when I seen the lights, I’ve opened the app and it says my chances of seeing the lights or 0%, this app is last updated four years ago, maybe a new update and tweaking are in order? Good idea, poor function.
★★★★★Excellent
Love the new look!
★★★☆☆Not loving the new update
Maybe I need to get used to it…I really liked having HP quickly available.
Update - to refresh I have to swipe away the program and then relaunch it.
The HP used to be in bigger text (Hemispheric Power in gigawatts)