Space Weather Tracker
Switch to Day Mode

CME Tracker

Coronal Mass Ejection Monitoring

NASA DONKI-powered CME detection with WSA-ENLIL modeled arrival times and geomagnetic impact forecasts.

Active CMEs (3d)

Loading live data…
SYNCING

Earth-Directed

Loading live data…
SYNCING

Fastest Speed

Loading live data…
SYNCING

Next Arrival

Loading live data…
SYNCING
WSA-ENLIL Solar Wind Model

Heliospheric CME propagation · Live overlay available

Live aurora data →

Recent CME events

NASA DONKI · Last 3 days

How long does a CME take to reach Earth?

A coronal mass ejection is a burst of solar plasma and magnetic field hurled from the Sun's corona. Travel time to Earth depends almost entirely on speed: a fast, powerful CME can cross the roughly 150 million km gap in as little as 15 to 18 hours, while a slower, more typical eruption can take 2 to 4 days. Not every CME is Earth-directed — many erupt away from our planet entirely and never arrive at all.

Fast CME
15–18 hours
Speeds above ~2,000 km/s — capable of triggering strong geomagnetic storms
Typical CME
2–3 days
Most Earth-directed CMEs fall in this range
Slow CME
3–5+ days
Weaker eruptions with limited geomagnetic effect

Once a CME's magnetic field connects with Earth's, it can compress the magnetosphere and drive geomagnetic storms — the same activity that fuels bright aurora. That's why the "Next Arrival" estimate above is one of the most useful numbers on this page: it's an early warning for when to start watching the aurora forecast closely.

Cosmic AI Explorer

Try asking:

Optional: Use Custom Anthropic Key

Stored only in your browser's local storage and sent directly to Anthropic, not through this site's server. Anything in local storage can be read by other scripts running on this page — only paste a key here if you're comfortable with that tradeoff.