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Massive solar plasma ejections fueled a widely viewable Northern Lights display Tuesday.

A third coronal mass ejection is due to arrive on Earth around midday Wednesday.

Geomagnetic storms can also disrupt electrical grids and air traffic communications.

Massive solar plasma ejections led to a rare chance to view the Northern Lights phenomenon across the continental U.S. Tuesday evening including most of Utah.

For those who missed the multi-color show, also known as the Aurora Borealis, meteorologists say continued coronal mass ejections could bring the display back Wednesday.

Coronal mass ejections or CMEs are huge bubbles of coronal plasma threaded by intense magnetic field lines that are ejected from the sun over the course of several hours, according to NASA . CMEs o

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