Aurora fans, this isn’t your week.

Earlier predictions foretold the possibility of a gorgeous display of the northern lights (aka aurora borealis) over as many as 17 states, possibly on Thursday. Now experts say that’s unlikely.

What’s in the forecast now? “Not much,” Bill Murtagh, the program coordinator at the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration’s Space Weather Prediction Center, told USA TODAY. “This one got blown out of proportion a bit.”

Even in the hours before a northern lights display, it’s difficult for forecasters to predict with certainty where the phenomenon will be visible.

AccuWeather meteorologist Brian Lada told USA TODAY “it’s easier to make forecasts for Earth-bound weather” than for space weather. He said the best space weather predictions are usually three days out, and that “anything beyond that is just speculation.”

Here’s why this week’s changing forecast attracted more attention than usual.

Long-range forecast attracts national attention

The University of Alaska-Fairbanks’ Geophysical Institute made the original forecast last week based on data from NOAA. The university now says that “the high levels of activity previously expected are now considered much less likely.”

But before the forecast changed, many news outlets picked up on the long-range aurora forecast, including USA TODAY, which said that states as far south as Maryland could see the famed northern lights on Thursday night.