EventStream.earth is a small, independent project built for people who
want to understand what the Sun is doing right now — without
wading through a dozen cluttered dashboards.
The goal is simple: offer a clean, human-friendly snapshot of current
solar and auroral conditions, with just enough depth for serious
sky-watchers and curious minds.
FocusReal-time Kp, Bz, solar wind & aurora context
Data sources
NOAA SWPC, NASA SDO & related public space-weather feeds
Status
Actively evolving — new visualizations & watch integrations planned.
What EventStream.earth is
A small site for big space weather.
Rather than being a full-blown agency portal, EventStream.earth is designed
as a focused “front panel” for the Sun and near-Earth space environment.
The idea is to keep things:
Readable – plain language labels and simple summaries.
Minimal – fewer screens, more signal.
Honest – show the raw data, not hype.
The main viewer and aurora pages pull from official public data feeds and
wrap them in a cleaner layout aimed at observers, photographers, and anyone
who just likes to keep an eye on the Sun.
The long-term plan is to connect these same streams to lightweight apps and
watch faces, so you can glance at current conditions without opening a browser.
Motivation
Why this exists.
The creator of EventStream.earth has spent years watching the Sun, auroras,
and long-term solar cycles — not as a large institution, but as a curious,
stubborn observer who likes building tools for other curious people.
Many existing space-weather dashboards are powerful but intimidating, packed
with acronyms and dense plots. This project is an attempt to keep the
essential information while softening the edges:
One place to check when storms are brewing.
Easy-to-read hints like “quiet”, “active”, or “storm-level”.
Room to grow into more advanced visuals over time.
Who’s behind it? EventStream.earth is created and maintained by
a single independent developer and space-weather enthusiast. If you’d like to
learn more about the guiding worldview behind the project, visit the About2 page.
To collaborate, suggest features, or say hello, feel free to reach out through the contact page.