Videos News
News Videos
Boulder Chamber – Boulder Business After Hours with Jane Lewis – February 19th 2014
Feb 26th
Jane Lewis – Boulder Chamber’s Event, Website and Possibilities Manager sits down with Jann Scott from Boulder Channel 1 and tells us about the Boulder Business After Hours event and other upcoming Boulder Chamber events.
Feb 19th, 2014 – Boulder Business After Hours – has become the one of the most popular ways to meet, learn from and get connected with local business leaders and influencers. at the Historic Boulderado Hotel.
Feb 25th, 2014 – Boulder Tech Job Fair at the Chamber – Come meet with some exciting companies that are hiring.
Feb 26th, 2014 – Boulder 2140 Five Year Anniversary – Young Boulder professionals meet at BMoCA for a celebration of 5 years!
Mar 5th, 2014 – Policy Round Table – Meeting for potential enhancements and improvements to the transportation system in Boulder.
Mar 6th, 2014 – Membership Orientation – Come learn what its all about to become a member of the Boulder Chamber.
Mar 10th, 2014 – Open Office Hours with John Tayer – Talk with the head of the Chamber and share your ideas or concerns with business in Boulder
Mar 12th, 2014 – BWLG Practical Steps for Social Media – Learn about strategies for Social Media as a business and how it can help strengthen your online marketing presence.
Mar 13th, 2014 – DIY Corporate Video Workshop – Learn how to make a video for your company using professional video techniques.
Trader Joe’s opening day Boulder Colorado
Feb 14th
Our Jann Scott went to Trader Joes Grand opening today. This is a fun entertaing video of his live TV show from inside.
Ma Nature’s sky light show on the way
Jan 9th
University of Colorado Boulder space weather experts say a powerful solar storm may cause the aurora borealis to light up as far south as Colorado and New Mexico in the coming nights.
http://youtu.be/Ip2ZGND1I9Q
Aurora borealis may dip into state
tonight, say CU-Boulder experts
Daniel Baker, director of CU-Boulder’s Laboratory for Atmospheric and Space Physics, said space weather forecasts indicate there is a good chance a coronal mass ejection tied to a large solar flare from the sun Tuesday may impact Earth today, hitting the planet’s outer magnetic shield and causing spectacular light displays tonight and perhaps tomorrow night. National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration experts have estimated there is a 90 percent chance a coronal mass ejection will hit Earth today.
“The aurora borealis, or ‘false dawn of the north,’ are brilliant dancing lights in the night sky caused by intense interactions of energetic electrons with the thin gases in Earth’s upper atmosphere,” said Baker. “The aurora are most commonly seen in Alaska, northern Canada and Scandinavia when the sun sends out powerful bursts of energy that can strike Earth’s protective outer magnetic shield called the magnetosphere,” he said.
“The strong solar winds associated with the storm events generate strong electric currents when they blow by the Earth’s magnetosphere,” said LASP Research Associate Bill Peterson. “These currents become unstable and drive processes in the magnetosphere that accelerate electrons down magnetic field lines where they hit the atmosphere over the poles.”
“One can think of aurora in some ways as if the Earth’s atmosphere is a giant TV screen and the magnetosphere generates intense beams of electrons that blast down along magnetic field lines to produce the red and green light picture show,” said Baker. “If the sun produces extremely powerful energy outbursts, the aurora can move to much lower latitudes than normal and then one can see the fantastic light displays in the lower 48 states, even as low in latitude as Colorado and New Mexico.”
According to Peterson, geophysicists have been measuring magnetic activity – essentially “wiggles” on instruments measuring Earth’s magnetic field – for over a century. The scientists have come up with a planetary magnetic index known as KP, ranging from 0 (quiet) to 9 (very active).
“The aurora is typically seen in Canada for KP less than 4,” Peterson said. “When the KP is 9, auroras can sometimes be seen as far south as Mexico City. Auroras are seen in Colorado when the KP is about 7.”
Peterson suggested those interested in seeing the northern lights or want to report sightings visithttp://www.aurorasaurus.org, a website called “Aurorasaurus” and led by the Los Alamos National Laboratory in New Mexico. The site is designed as a real-time map of confirmed aurora sightings and includes a place for citizen-scientists who want to participate to report aurora sightings in their own neighborhoods.
For additional information visit NOAA’s Space Weather Prediction Center at http://www.swpc.noaa.gov. For more information on LASP visit http://lasp.colorado.edu/home/.
-CU-