The Aurora is caused by solar winds striking the upper thermosphere. The ozone layer is in the lower stratosphere. They are a long way apart. Needless to say, one does not affect the other.
a science dweeb on the radio just said this will make the Aurora Borealis visible down to latitude 46 - Oregon, Idaho, Minnesota, & Maine (remember, usually only viewable at the North Pole & North Canada).
About 10 years ago, I saw a faint red glow in the night sky south of Albuquerque. I thought it was a fire somewhere. I read in the paper the next day that it was the Aurora.
I saw a very impressive display in northern Indiana about 20 years ago.
I saw it in middle Tennessee a few years ago, but it was a big red glow in the northern sky. It looked like maybe there was a huge forest fire just over the horizon. It was cool and kind of freaky.
I’m jealous. Did you have to be pretty far outside the city? I’d imagine the city lights would make them difficult to see, but I have no idea how bright these auroras are.
That would have actually been the aurora australis. Singapore is north of the rotational equator, but what matters for the aurorae is the magnetic field, not the rotation. And since the magnetic pole is up in Canada (and at a point opposite on the Earth), Singapore is actually closer to the pole in the south.
It’s also actually very rare to see the aurora right at the magnetic poles: It’s a ring around the pole.
And I’ve seen the Lights about 8 times since I’ve been in Montana (at 45:40 degrees).