No storm Peru America/Lima · UTC-5Population 428,450Estimate
The geomagnetic field over Cusco is quiet. The planetary Kp index is 0.7 — about 0.4 as effective local exposure at this latitude — and the next 72 hours should stay comfortable, peaking near Kp 3.0 around Fri 10:00 PM local time.
Planetary Kp now0.7NOAA SWPC, live
Effective in Cusco0.4×0.59 by latitude · estimate
72-hour peak3.0around Fri 10:00 PM local time
Aurora fromKp 9at geomagnetic -4.4° · estimate
Cusco sits at geomagnetic latitude -4.4° — and that latitude, not the city itself, decides how strongly a storm is felt: we estimate local exposure at ×0.59 of the planetary Kp. Auroras become plausible here from about Kp 9. All times on this page are shown in Cusco local time (UTC-5).
No — the field is quiet. Kp is 0.7 right now, and the next 72 hours peak near Kp 3.0 around Fri 10:00 PM local time. Kp 5 or higher would count as a storm.
Can you see the southern lights in Cusco?
Realistically no. At geomagnetic latitude -4.4° the auroral oval stays far away even in strong storms — a sighting would take a once-in-decades event.
Is the Kp index different in Cusco?
The Kp index itself is planetary — one number for the whole Earth. What changes is how strongly a place feels it: at Cusco's geomagnetic latitude (-4.4°) we estimate the effective exposure at about ×0.59 of the planetary value.
How can a storm affect how people feel in Cusco?
Research is mixed, but many weather-sensitive people report headaches, fatigue or restless sleep during elevated activity. It is a possible correlation, not a diagnosis — the forecast above shows when the sensitive windows are, and a symptom journal shows whether they matter for you.
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