Revision as of 17:38, 4 October 2009 view sourceRuslik0 (talk | contribs)Edit filter managers, Administrators54,769 edits Undid revision 317871136 by HarryAlffa (talk)Magnetic field lines do not accelerate particles← Previous edit | Latest revision as of 20:42, 5 January 2025 view source Zefr (talk | contribs)Extended confirmed users, Pending changes reviewers69,423 edits →Etymology: clarify origins and first uses per OED ref, update source; rv unrelated ref from The Odyssey | ||
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{{Short description|Atmospheric effect caused by the solar wind}} | |||
{{Redirect|Aurora Borealis}} | |||
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{{Redirect|Aurora Australis|the ship|Aurora Australis (icebreaker)|the book|Aurora Australis (book)}} | |||
{{Redirect-several|Aurora|Aurora Borealis|Aurora Australis|Northern Lights|Southern Lights}} | |||
{{Use Canadian English|date=October 2024}} | |||
{{Use dmy dates|date=October 2024}} | |||
{{multiple image | |||
| total_width = 320px | |||
| footer = Images of auroras from across the world, including those with rarer red and blue lights | |||
| perrow = 2/2 | |||
| image1 = Northern Lights 02.jpg | |||
| alt1 = Northern Lights with very rare blue light emitted by nitrogen | |||
| image2 = Aurora borealis over Eielson Air Force Base, Alaska.jpg | |||
| alt2 = Aurora corealis shines above Bear Lake near Eielson Air Force Base, Alaska | |||
| image3 = Aurore australe - Aurora australis.jpg | |||
| alt3 = Aurora australis in Antarctica | |||
| image4 = Red and green aurora.jpg | |||
| alt4 = Red and green Aurora in Fairbanks, Alaska | |||
}} | |||
], 2017<ref>{{cite web |url=https://eol.jsc.nasa.gov/BeyondThePhotography/CrewEarthObservationsVideos/videos/slights_iss_20170817/slights_iss_20170817.mp4 |title=Southern Lights over the Australian Bight |publisher=NASA |access-date=12 September 2022 |archive-date=21 October 2022 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20221021182327/https://eol.jsc.nasa.gov/BeyondThePhotography/CrewEarthObservationsVideos/videos/slights_iss_20170817/slights_iss_20170817.mp4 |url-status=live }}</ref>]] | |||
An '''aurora'''{{efn|Modern style guides recommend that the names of ], such as aurora borealis, be uncapitalized.<ref>{{cite web | |||
{{other|Aurora (disambiguation)}} | |||
|url=http://www1.umn.edu/urelate/style/sciterminology.html#Anchor-37516|title=University of Minnesota Style Manual|publisher=.umn.edu|date=18 July 2007|access-date=5 August 2010|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20100722101345/http://www1.umn.edu/urelate/style/sciterminology.html#Anchor-37516|archive-date=22 July 2010|url-status=dead}}</ref>}} ({{plural form}} '''aurorae''' or '''auroras'''),{{efn|The name "auroras" is now the more common plural in the US;{{citation needed|reason=the only provided ref does not state this|date=October 2019}} however, ''aurorae'' is the original Latin plural and is often used by scientists. In some contexts, aurora is an uncountable noun, multiple sightings being referred to as "the aurora".}} | |||
]]] | |||
also commonly known as the '''northern lights''' ('''aurora borealis''') or '''southern lights''' ('''aurora australis'''),{{efn|The aurorae seen in northern latitudes, around the Arctic, can be referred to as the '''northern lights''' or '''aurora borealis''', while those seen in southern latitudes, around the Antarctic, are known as the '''southern lights''' or '''aurora australis'''. '''Polar lights''' and '''aurora polaris''' are the more general equivalents of these terms.}} is a natural light display in ]'s sky, predominantly seen in ] (around the ] and ]). Auroras display dynamic patterns of brilliant lights that appear as curtains, rays, spirals, or dynamic flickers covering the entire sky.<ref>Lui, A., 2019. Imaging global auroras in space. Light: Science & Applications, 8(1).</ref> | |||
]]] | |||
] | |||
Auroras are the result of disturbances in the Earth's ] caused by the ]. Major disturbances result from enhancements in the speed of the solar wind from ] and ]. These disturbances alter the trajectories of ]s in the magnetospheric ]. These particles, mainly ]s and ]s, ] into the upper atmosphere (]/]). The resulting ] and excitation of atmospheric constituents emit light of varying colour and complexity. The form of the aurora, occurring within bands around both polar regions, is also dependent on the amount of acceleration imparted to the precipitating particles. | |||
'''Auroras''', sometimes called the '''northern and southern (polar) lights''' or '''aurorae''' (''singular:'' '''aurora'''), are natural light displays in the ], usually observed at ], particularly in the ]. They typically occur in the ]. They are also referred to as '''polar auroras'''. In northern ]s, the effect is known as the '''aurora borealis''', named after the ] ] of dawn, ], and the ] name for north wind, ], by ] in 1621.<ref> | |||
by Paul Fleury Mottelay. Published by Read Books, 2007, ISBN 1406754765. p 114.</ref> The aurora borealis is also called the '''northern polar lights''', as it is only visible in the sky from the ], the chance of visibility increasing with proximity to the ], which is currently in the arctic islands of northern ]. Auroras seen near the magnetic pole may be high overhead, but from further away, they illuminate the northern horizon as a greenish glow or sometimes a faint red, as if the sun were rising from an unusual direction. The aurora borealis most often occurs near the equinoxes; from September to October and from March to April. The northern lights have had a number of names throughout history. The ] people call this phenomenon the "'''Dance of the Spirits'''." In the middle age the auroras has been called by sign of God (see Wilfried Schröder, Das Phänomen des Polarlichts, Darmstadt 1984). | |||
Auroras can be spotted throughout the world. It is most visible closer to the poles due to the longer periods of darkness and the magnetic field. | |||
]s in the ], ]s, ]s, and some ]s also host auroras. | |||
Its southern counterpart, the '''aurora australis''' or the '''southern polar lights''', has similar properties, but is only visible from high southern latitudes in ], ], or ]. ''Australis'' is the ] word for "of the South." | |||
== Etymology == | |||
The term ''aurora borealis'' was coined by ] in 1619, from the Roman ], goddess of the dawn, and the Greek ], god of the cold north wind.<ref>{{Cite book|doi=10.1029/HG002p0011|chapter=An historical footnote on the origin of 'aurora borealis'|title=History of Geophysics |volume=2 |pages=11–14|year=1986|author-link1=George Siscoe|last1=Siscoe|first1=G. L.|isbn=978-0-87590-276-0|bibcode = 1986HGeo....2...11S | issn = 8755-1217 }}</ref><ref>{{cite book|last1=Guiducci|first1=Mario|last2=Galilei|first2=Galileo|title=Discorso delle Comete|trans-title=Discourse on Comets|date=1619|publisher=Pietro Cecconcelli|location=Firenze (Florence), Italy|page=39|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=_EtbAAAAcAAJ&pg=PA39|language=it|access-date=31 July 2019|archive-date=12 May 2024|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20240512165109/https://books.google.com/books?id=_EtbAAAAcAAJ&pg=PA39#v=onepage&q&f=false|url-status=live}} On p. 39, Galileo explains that auroras are due to sunlight reflecting from thin, high clouds. From p. 39: {{lang|it|"... molti di voi avranno più d'una volta veduto 'l Cielo nell' ore notturne, nelle parti verso Settentrione, illuminato in modo, che di lucidità non-cede alla piu candida Aurora, ne lontana allo spuntar del Sole; effetto, che per mio credere, non-ha origine altrode, che dall' essersi parte dell' aria vaporosa, che circonda la terra, per qualche cagione in modo più del consueto assottigliata, che sublimandosi assai più del suo consueto, abbia sormontato il cono dell' ombra terrestre, si che essendo la sua parte superiore ferita dal Sole abbia potuto rifletterci il suo splendore, e formarci questa boreale aurora."}} ("... many of you will have seen, more than once, the sky in the night hours, in parts towards the north, illuminated in a way that the clear does not yield to the brighter aurora, far from the rising of the sun; an effect that, by my thinking, has no other origin than being part of the vaporous air that surrounds the Earth, for some reason thinner than usual, which, being sublimated far more than expected, has risen above the cone of the Earth's shadow, so that its upper part, being struck by the sun, has been able to reflect its splendor and to form this aurora borealis.")</ref> | |||
The word ''aurora'' is derived from the name of the Roman goddess of the dawn, ], who travelled from east to west announcing the coming of the ].<ref name="oed">{{cite dictionary|url=https://www.etymonline.com/word/aurora|title=Aurora|editor-last=Harper|editor-first=Douglas|dictionary=Online Etymology Dictionary|date=2025|access-date=5 January 2025 }}</ref> ''Aurora'' was first used in English in the ].<ref name=oed/> The words ''borealis'' and ''australis'' are derived from the names of the ancient gods of the north wind (]) and the south wind (]) in ].<ref name=oed/> | |||
==Auroral mechanism== | |||
The phenomenon of aurora is an interaction between the Earth's magnetic field and solar wind. | |||
''Aurora borealis'' was first used to describe the northern lights by the French philosopher, ] (also called Petrus Gassendus) in 1621, then entered English in 1828.<ref name=oed/> | |||
Auroras are produced by the collision of charged particles from ]'s ], mostly ] but also ] and heavier particles, with ]s and ]s of Earth's upper ] (at altitudes above 80 km (50 miles)). The particles have energies of 1 to 100 ]. They originate from the Sun and arrive at the vicinity of Earth in the relatively low-energy ]. When the trapped ] of the solar wind is favorably oriented (principally southwards) it connects with Earth's magnetic field, and solar particles enter the magnetosphere and are swept to the magnetotail. Further ] accelerates the particles towards Earth. | |||
== Occurrence == | |||
The collisions in the atmosphere electrically excite electrons to take quantum leaps (a mechanism in which the electron's kinetic energy is converted to visible light) within the upper atmosphere. Most auroras are ] and ] emissions from atomic ]. Molecular ] and nitrogen ] produce some low level red (pink) and very high ]/] auroras. The light blue and green colors are produced by ionic nitrogen and the neutral helium gives off the purple colour whereas neon is responsible for the rare orange flares with the rippled edges. Different gasses interacting with the upper atmosphere will produce different colors, caused by the different compounds of oxygen and nitrogen. The level of solar wind activity from the Sun can also influence the colour and intensity of the auroras.{{fact|date=July 2008}} | |||
] illuminating the ] in orange with silhouettes of clouds, and the ] in white and blue. Next the ] (pink area) extends to the orange and faintly green line of the lowest ], at about one hundred kilometres at the ] and the lower edge of the ] (invisible). Continuing with green and red bands of aurorae stretching over several hundred kilometres.]] | |||
] | |||
Auroras are most commonly observed in the "auroral zone",<ref name="feldstein-2011">{{cite journal|last=Feldstein|first=Y. I.|year=2011|title=A Quarter Century with the Auroral Oval|journal=EOS|volume=67|issue=40|page=761|doi=10.1029/EO067i040p00761-02|bibcode=1986EOSTr..67..761F }}</ref> a band approximately 6° (~660 km) wide in latitude centered on 67° north and south.<ref name="Bruzek" /> The region that currently displays an aurora is called the "auroral oval". The oval is displaced by the solar wind, pushing it about 15° away from the geomagnetic pole (not the geographic pole) in the noon direction and 23° away in the midnight direction.<ref name=Bruzek>{{Cite book|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=9gLwCAAAQBAJ&pg=PA190|title=Illustrated Glossary for Solar and Solar-Terrestrial Physics|last1=Bruzek|first1=A.|last2=Durrant|first2=C. J.|date=2012|publisher=Springer Science & Business Media|isbn=978-94-010-1245-4|page=190|access-date=30 August 2017|archive-date=12 May 2024|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20240512165153/https://books.google.com/books?id=9gLwCAAAQBAJ&pg=PA190#v=onepage&q&f=false|url-status=live}}</ref> The peak equatorward extent of the oval is displaced slightly from geographic midnight. It is centered about 3–5° nightward of the magnetic pole, so that auroral arcs reach furthest toward the equator when the ] in question is in between the observer and the ], which is called ]. | |||
Early evidence for a geomagnetic connection comes from the statistics of auroral observations. ] (1860),<ref name="loomis-1859" /> and later Hermann Fritz (1881)<ref>{{cite book|last1=Fritz|first1=Hermann|title=Das Polarlicht|series=Internationale wissenschaftliche Bibliothek|volume=49|trans-title=The Aurora|date=1881|publisher=F. A. Brockhaus|location=Leipzig, Germany|url=https://babel.hathitrust.org/cgi/pt?id=nnc1.cu50485466&view=1up&seq=11|language=de|access-date=31 July 2019|archive-date=28 August 2021|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20210828192807/https://babel.hathitrust.org/cgi/pt?id=nnc1.cu50485466&view=1up&seq=11|url-status=live}}</ref> and Sophus Tromholt (1881)<ref>{{cite book|last1=Tromholt|first1=Sophus|title=Meteorologisk Aarbog for 1880. Part 1.|date=1881|publisher=Danske Meteorologiske Institut|location=Copenhagen, Denmark|pages=I–LX|url=https://archive.org/details/meteorologiska1880dansuoft/page/n191|language=da, fr|chapter=Om Nordlysets Perioder / Sur les périodes de l'aurore boréale }}</ref> in more detail, established that the aurora appeared mainly in the auroral zone. | |||
== Forms and magnetism== | |||
]]] | |||
Typically the aurora appears either as a diffuse glow or as "curtains" that approximately extend in the east-west direction. At some times, they form "quiet arcs"; at others ("active aurora"), they evolve and change constantly. Each curtain consists of many parallel rays, each lined up with the local direction of the magnetic field lines, suggesting that aurora is shaped by Earth's magnetic field. Indeed, satellites show electrons to be guided by magnetic field lines, spiraling around them while moving towards Earth. | |||
In northern ]s, the effect is known as the aurora borealis or the northern lights. The southern counterpart, the aurora australis or the southern lights, has features almost identical to the aurora borealis and changes simultaneously with changes in the northern auroral zone.<ref>{{Cite journal|doi=10.1016/j.jastp.2006.05.026|title=Auroral conjugacy studies based on global imaging|journal=Journal of Atmospheric and Solar-Terrestrial Physics|volume=69|issue=3|page=249|year=2007|last1=Østgaard|first1=N.|last2=Mende|first2=S. B.|last3=Frey|first3=H. U.|last4=Sigwarth|first4=J. B.|last5=Åsnes|first5=A.|last6=Weygand|first6=J. M.|bibcode=2007JASTP..69..249O}}</ref> The aurora australis is visible from high southern latitudes in ], the ], ], ], the ], and under exceptional circumstances as far north as ].<ref>{{cite news |title=Aurora austral en Uruguay: fotógrafos registran un hecho "histórico" y astrónomos explican por qué pasó |url=https://www.elobservador.com.uy/nacional/aurora-austral-uruguay-fotografos-registran-un-hecho-historico-y-astronomos-explican-que-paso-n5939403 |access-date=13 May 2024 |work=El Observador (Uruguay)}}</ref> The aurora borealis is visible from areas around the Arctic such as ], ], ], ], the ], ], ], ], and ]. A ] causes the auroral ovals (north and south) to expand, bringing the aurora to lower latitudes. On rare occasions, the aurora borealis can be seen as far south as the Mediterranean and the southern states of the US while the aurora australis can be seen as far north as ] and the ] region in ]. During the ], the greatest geomagnetic storm ever observed, auroras were seen even in the tropics. | |||
The similarity to curtains is often enhanced by folds called "striations". When the field line guiding a bright auroral patch leads to a point directly above the observer, the aurora may appear as a "corona" of diverging rays, an effect of ]. | |||
Auroras seen within the auroral oval may be directly overhead. From farther away, they illuminate the poleward horizon as a greenish glow, or sometimes a faint red, as if the Sun were rising from an unusual direction. Auroras also occur poleward of the auroral zone as either diffuse patches or arcs,<ref>{{cite journal|last=Frey|first=H. U.|year=2007|title=Localized aurora beyond the auroral oval|doi=10.1029/2005RG000174|journal=Reviews of Geophysics|volume=45|issue=1|pages=RG1003|bibcode=2007RvGeo..45.1003F|doi-access=free }}</ref> which can be subvisual.<div style="overflow:auto;"> | |||
Although it was first mentioned by ] ]/] ], ] and ] first described in 1741 evidence for magnetic control, namely, large magnetic fluctuations occurred whenever the aurora was observed overhead. This indicates (it was later realized) that large ]s were associated with the aurora, flowing in the region where auroral light originated. ] (1908)<ref>Birkeland, Kristian (1908). "The Norwegian Aurora Polaris Expedition 1902-3."</ref> deduced that the currents flowed in the east-west directions along the auroral arc, and such currents, flowing from the dayside towards (approximately) midnight were later named "auroral electrojets" (see also ]s). | |||
{{multiple image | |||
On 26 February 2008, ] probes were able to determine, for the first time, the triggering event for the onset of magnetospheric substorms <ref>http://www.nasa.gov/mission_pages/themis/auroras/themis_power.html</ref>. Two of the five probes, positioned approximately one third the distance to the moon, measured events suggesting a magnetic reconnection event 96 seconds prior to auroral intensification <ref>http://www.sciencemag.org/cgi/content/abstract/1160495</ref>. Dr. Vassilis Angelopoulos of the ], the principal investigator for the THEMIS mission, claimed, "Our data show clearly and for the first time that magnetic reconnection is the trigger." <ref>http://www.space.com/scienceastronomy/080724-themis-aurora-mystery.html</ref>. | |||
| title = Videos of the aurora australis taken by the crew of ] on board the International Space Station | |||
| align = center | |||
| direction = horizontal | |||
| image1 = Aurora Australis from ISS 2011 - 1.ogv | |||
| width1 = 300 | |||
| alt1 = | |||
| caption1 = This sequence of shots was taken 17 September 2011 from 17:22:27 to 17:45:12 GMT, on an ascending pass from south of ] to just north of ] over the ]. | |||
| image2 = Aurora Australis over Indian Ocean.ogv | |||
| width2 = 300 | |||
| alt2 = | |||
| caption2 = This sequence of shots was taken 7 September 2011 from 17:38:03 to 17:49:15 GMT, from the ] in the South Indian Ocean to southern Australia. | |||
| image3 = Aurora Australis south of Australia.ogv | |||
| width3 = 300 | |||
| alt3 = | |||
| caption3 = This sequence of shots was taken 11 September 2011 from 13:45:06 to 14:01:51 GMT, from a descending pass near eastern Australia, rounding about to an ascending pass to the east of ]. | |||
}} | |||
{{multiple image | |||
| title = ] maps of North America and Eurasia | |||
| align = center | |||
| caption_align = center | |||
| direction = horizontal | |||
| width = 450 | |||
| footer = These maps show the local midnight equatorward boundary of the aurora at different levels of geomagnetic activity as of 28 October 2011 – these maps change as the ] change. A ] of ''']={{hsp}}3''' corresponds to relatively low levels of geomagnetic activity, while ''']={{hsp}}9''' represents high levels. | |||
| image1 = Aurora Kp Map North America.gif | |||
| alt1 = Kp map of North America | |||
| caption1 =North America | |||
| image2 = Aurora Kp Map Eurasia.gif | |||
| alt2 = Kp map of Eurasia | |||
| caption2 =Eurasia | |||
}} | |||
</div> | |||
Auroras are occasionally seen in latitudes below the auroral zone, when a geomagnetic storm temporarily enlarges the auroral oval. Large geomagnetic storms are most common during the peak of the 11-year ] cycle or during the three years after the peak.<ref>{{cite journal|last1=Stamper|first1=J.|first2=M.|last2=Lockwood|first3=M. N.|last3=Wild|title=Solar causes of the long-term increase in geomagnetic activity|journal=Journal of Geophysical Research|date=December 1999|volume=104|issue=A12|pages=28,325–28,342|doi=10.1029/1999JA900311|bibcode=1999JGR...10428325S|url=http://centaur.reading.ac.uk/38740/1/180_Stamperetal_1999JA900311.pdf|doi-access=free|access-date=7 December 2019|archive-date=30 April 2019|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20190430080959/http://centaur.reading.ac.uk/38740/1/180_Stamperetal_1999JA900311.pdf|url-status=live}}</ref><ref>{{cite journal|last1=Papitashvili|first1=V. O.|last2=Papitashva|first2=N. E.|last3=King|first3=J. H.|title=Solar cycle effects in planetary geomagnetic activity: Analysis of 36-year long OMNI dataset|journal=Geophysical Research Letters|date=September 2000|volume=27|issue=17|pages=2797–2800|doi=10.1029/2000GL000064|bibcode=2000GeoRL..27.2797P|url=https://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/94796/1/grl13462.pdf|hdl=2027.42/94796|doi-access=free|access-date=20 April 2018|archive-date=12 May 2024|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20240512165313/https://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/94796/1/grl13462.pdf|url-status=live}}</ref> An electron spirals (gyrates) about a field line at an angle that is determined by its velocity vectors, parallel and perpendicular, respectively, to the local geomagnetic field vector B. This angle is known as the "pitch angle" of the particle. The distance, or radius, of the electron from the field line at any time is known as its Larmor radius. The pitch angle increases as the electron travels to a region of greater field strength nearer to the atmosphere. Thus, it is possible for some particles to return, or mirror, if the angle becomes 90° before entering the atmosphere to collide with the denser molecules there. Other particles that do not mirror enter the atmosphere and contribute to the auroral display over a range of altitudes. Other types of auroras have been observed from space; for example, "poleward arcs" stretching sunward across the polar cap, the related "theta aurora",<ref>{{Cite journal|doi=10.1029/2003GL017914|title=Observations of non-conjugate theta aurora|journal=Geophysical Research Letters|volume=30|issue=21|page=2125|year=2003|last1=Østgaard|first1=N.|bibcode=2003GeoRL..30.2125O|doi-access=free }}</ref> and "dayside arcs" near noon. These are relatively infrequent and poorly understood. Other interesting effects occur such as pulsating aurora, "black aurora" and their rarer companion "anti-black aurora" and subvisual red arcs. In addition to all these, a weak glow (often deep red) observed around the two polar cusps, the field lines separating the ones that close through Earth from those that are swept into the tail and close remotely. | |||
=== Images === | |||
Still more evidence for a magnetic connection are the statistics of auroral observations. ] (1860) and later in more detail ] (1881)<ref>Fritz, Hermann (1881). "Das Polarlicht."</ref> established that the aurora appeared mainly in the "auroral zone", a ring-shaped region with a radius of approximately 2500 km around Earth's magnetic pole. It was hardly ever seen near the geographic pole, which is about 2000 km away from the magnetic pole. The instantaneous distribution of auroras ("auroral oval", ] 1963<ref>Feldstein, Y. (1963). "Some problems concerning the morphology of auroras and magnetic disturbances at high latitudes", ''Geomagnetism and Aeronomy'', 3, 183-192.</ref>) is slightly different, centered about 3-5 degrees nightward of the magnetic pole, so that auroral arcs reach furthest towards the equator around midnight. The aurora can be seen best at this time. | |||
], superimposed over a digital image of Earth]] | |||
Early work on the imaging of the auroras was done in 1949 by the ] using the ] radar.<ref>{{Cite web |title=Northern Lights |url=https://www.geirangerguide.no/northern-lights |access-date=1 March 2024 |website=Geiranger Guide |language=en-US |archive-date=1 March 2024 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20240301060356/https://www.geirangerguide.no/northern-lights |url-status=live }}</ref> The altitudes where auroral emissions occur were revealed by ] and his colleagues, who used cameras to triangulate more than 12,000 auroras.<ref>{{cite journal|last1=Størmer|first1=Carl|title=Frequency of 12,330 measured heights of aurora from southern Norway in the years 1911–1944|journal=Terrestrial Magnetism and Atmospheric Electricity|year=1946|volume=51|issue=4|pages=501–504|doi=10.1029/te051i004p00501|bibcode=1946TeMAE..51..501S }}</ref> They discovered that most of the light is produced between {{convert|90|and|150|km|mi|abbr=on}} above the ground, while extending at times to more than {{convert|1000|km|mi|abbr=on}}. | |||
==Solar wind and the magnetosphere== | |||
] | |||
The Earth is constantly immersed in the ], a rarefied flow of hot plasma (gas of free electrons and positive ions) emitted by the Sun in all directions, a result of the million-degree heat of the Sun's outermost layer, the ]. The solar wind usually reaches Earth with a velocity around 400 km/s, density around 5 ions/cm<sup>3</sup> and magnetic field intensity around 2–5 nT (]; Earth's surface field is typically 30,000–50,000 nT). These are typical values. During ], in particular, flows can be several times faster; the ] (IMF) may also be much stronger. | |||
=== Forms === | |||
The IMF originates on the Sun, related to the field of ]s, and its ] are dragged out by the solar wind. That alone would tend to line them up in the Sun-Earth direction, but the rotation of the Sun skews them (at Earth) by about 45 degrees, so that field lines passing Earth may actually start near the western edge ("limb") of the visible sun.<ref> from a ] website</ref> | |||
According to Clark (2007), there are five main forms that can be seen from the ground, from least to most visible:<ref>{{Cite journal|doi=10.1016/j.endeavour.2007.07.004|title=Astronomical fire: Richard Carrington and the solar flare of 1859|journal= Endeavour|volume=31|issue=3|pages=104–109|year=2007|last1=Clark|first1=Stuart|pmid=17764743}}</ref> | |||
] | |||
Earth's ] is the space region dominated by its magnetic field. It forms an obstacle in the path of the solar wind, causing it to be diverted around it, at a distance of about 70,000 km (before it reaches that boundary, typically 12,000–15,000 km upstream, a ] forms). The width of the magnetospheric obstacle, abreast of Earth, is typically 190,000 km, and on the night side a long "magnetotail" of stretched field lines extends to great distances. | |||
] | |||
* A mild ''glow'', near the horizon. These can be close to the limit of visibility,<ref>{{Cite journal|doi=10.1016/S1364-6826(96)00113-7|title=Polar cap arcs: A review|journal=Journal of Atmospheric and Solar-Terrestrial Physics|volume=59|issue=10|page=1087|year=1997|last1=Zhu|first1=L.|last2=Schunk|first2=R. W.|last3=Sojka|first3=J. J.|bibcode=1997JASTP..59.1087Z }}</ref> but can be distinguished from moonlit clouds because stars can be seen undiminished through the glow. | |||
* ''Patches'' or ''surfaces'' that look like clouds. | |||
* ''Arcs'' curve across the ]. | |||
* ''Rays'' are light and dark stripes across arcs, reaching upwards by various amounts. | |||
* ''Coronas'' cover much of the sky and diverge from one point on it. | |||
Brekke (1994) also described some auroras as "curtains".<ref name="a-1994">{{cite book|last1=A|first1=Brekke|last2=A|first2=Egeland|title=The Northern Lights|date=1994|publisher=Grøndahl and Dreyer, Oslo|isbn=978-82-504-2105-9|page=137}}</ref> The similarity to curtains is often enhanced by folds within the arcs. Arcs can fragment or break up into separate, at times rapidly changing, often rayed features that may fill the whole sky. These are also known as ''discrete auroras'', which are at times bright enough to read a newspaper by at night.<ref name="yahnin-1997">{{Cite journal|doi=10.1007/s00585-997-0943-z|title=Magnetospheric source region of discrete auroras inferred from their relationship with isotropy boundaries of energetic particles|journal=Annales Geophysicae|volume=15|issue=8|page=943|year=1997|last1=Yahnin|first1=A. G.|last2=Sergeev|first2=V. A.|last3=Gvozdevsky|first3=B. B.|last4=Vennerstrøm|first4=S.|bibcode=1997AnGeo..15..943Y|doi-access=free }}</ref> | |||
When the solar wind is perturbed, it easily transfers energy and material into the magnetosphere. The electrons and ions in the magnetosphere that are thus energized move along the magnetic field lines to the polar regions of the atmosphere. | |||
These forms are consistent with auroras being shaped by Earth's magnetic field. The appearances of arcs, rays, curtains, and coronas are determined by the ].<ref>{{Cite journal|doi=10.1073/pnas.3.1.1|pmid=16586674|pmc=1091158|title=Inferences concerning auroras|journal=Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America|volume=3|issue=1|pages=1–7|year=1917|last1= Thomson|first1=E.|bibcode=1917PNAS....3....1T|doi-access=free}}</ref> | |||
==Frequency of occurrence== | |||
], ]]] | |||
The aurora is a common occurrence in the Poles. It is occasionally seen in temperate latitudes, when a strong magnetic storm temporarily expands the auroral oval. Large magnetic storms are most common during the peak of the eleven-year ] or during the three years after that peak.{{Fact|date=September 2007}} However, within the auroral zone the likelihood of an aurora occurring depends mostly on the slant of IMF lines (the slant is known as B<sub>z</sub>), being greater with southward slants. | |||
=== Colours and wavelengths of auroral light === | |||
]s that ignite auroras actually happen more often during the months around the ]es. It is not well understood why geomagnetic storms are tied to Earth's seasons while polar activity is not. But it is known that during spring and autumn, the interplanetary magnetic field and that of Earth link up. At the ], Earth's magnetic field points north. When B<sub>z</sub> becomes large and negative (i.e., the IMF tilts south), it can partially cancel Earth's magnetic field at the point of contact. South-pointing B<sub>z</sub>'s open a door through which energy from the solar wind can reach Earth's inner magnetosphere. | |||
* Red: At its highest altitudes, excited atomic oxygen emits at 630 nm (red); low concentration of atoms and lower sensitivity of eyes at this wavelength make this colour visible only under more intense solar activity. The low number of oxygen atoms and their gradually diminishing concentration is responsible for the faint appearance of the top parts of the "curtains". Scarlet, crimson, and carmine are the most often-seen hues of red for the auroras.{{fact|date=October 2024}} | |||
The peaking of B<sub>z</sub> during this time is a result of geometry. The interplanetary magnetic field (IMF) comes from the Sun and is carried outward with the solar wind. Because the Sun rotates the IMF has a ]. Earth's magnetic dipole axis is most closely aligned with the Parker spiral in April and October. As a result, southward (and northward) excursions of B<sub>z</sub> are greatest then. | |||
* Green: At lower altitudes, the more frequent collisions suppress the 630 nm (red) mode: rather the 557.7 nm emission (green) dominates. A fairly high concentration of atomic oxygen and higher eye sensitivity in green make green auroras the most common. The excited molecular nitrogen (atomic nitrogen being rare due to the high stability of the N<sub>2</sub> molecule) plays a role here, as it can transfer energy by collision to an oxygen atom, which then radiates it away at the green wavelength. (Red and green can also mix together to produce pink or yellow hues.) The rapid decrease of concentration of atomic oxygen below about 100 km is responsible for the abrupt-looking end of the lower edges of the curtains. Both the 557.7 and 630.0 nm wavelengths correspond to ]s of atomic oxygen, a slow mechanism responsible for the graduality (0.7 s and 107 s respectively) of flaring and fading.{{fact|date=October 2024}} | |||
] | |||
* Blue: At yet lower altitudes, atomic oxygen is uncommon, and molecular nitrogen and ionized molecular nitrogen take over in producing visible light emission, radiating at a large number of wavelengths in both red and blue parts of the spectrum, with 428 nm (blue) being dominant. Blue and purple emissions, typically at the lower edges of the "curtains", show up at the highest levels of solar activity.<ref>{{cite web|work=Windows to the Universe|title=Auroral colors and spectra|url=http://www.windows2universe.org/earth/Magnetosphere/tour/tour_earth_magnetosphere_09.html|access-date=13 January 2014|archive-date=19 December 2014|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20141219143402/http://www.windows2universe.org/earth/Magnetosphere/tour/tour_earth_magnetosphere_09.html|url-status=live}}</ref> The molecular nitrogen transitions are much faster than the atomic oxygen ones. | |||
* Ultraviolet: Ultraviolet radiation from auroras (within the optical window but not visible to virtually all{{Clarify|reason=vague|date=July 2020}} humans) has been observed with the requisite equipment. Ultraviolet auroras have also been seen on Mars,<ref name="scinewscom">{{cite web|url=http://www.sci-news.com/space/science-nasas-maven-ultraviolet-aurora-mars-02614.html|title=NASA's MAVEN Orbiter Detects Ultraviolet Aurora on Mars | Space Exploration|publisher=Sci-News.com|access-date=16 August 2015|archive-date=25 July 2015|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20150725140509/http://www.sci-news.com/space/science-nasas-maven-ultraviolet-aurora-mars-02614.html|url-status=live}}</ref> Jupiter, and Saturn. | |||
* Infrared: Infrared radiation, in wavelengths that are within the optical window, is also part of many auroras.<ref name="scinewscom" /><ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.dapep.org/DAPT/EM-Wiki/aurora-borealis.html|title=Aurora Borealis|publisher=dapep.org|access-date=16 August 2015|archive-date=19 April 2015|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20150419140349/http://www.dapep.org/DAPT/EM-Wiki/aurora-borealis.html|url-status=dead}}{{clarify|reason=dapep.org is down. Cite by name, not domain name. What was it – possibly Denver Area Physics Education Project?|date=November 2023}}</ref> | |||
* Yellow and pink are ] of red and green or blue. Other shades of red, as well as orange and gold, may be seen on rare occasions; yellow-green is moderately common.{{Clarify|reason=vague|date=July 2020}} As red, green, and blue are linearly independent colours, additive synthesis could, in theory, produce most human-perceived colours, but the ones mentioned in this article comprise a virtually exhaustive list. | |||
=== Changes with time === | |||
However, B<sub>z</sub> is not the only influence on geomagnetic activity. The Sun's rotation axis is tilted 8 degrees with respect to the plane of Earth's orbit. Because the solar wind blows more rapidly from the Sun's poles than from its equator, the average speed of particles buffeting Earth's magnetosphere waxes and wanes every six months. The solar wind speed is greatest — by about 50 km/s, on average — around 5 September and 5 March when Earth lies at its highest heliographic latitude. | |||
] from one night's recording by an all-sky camera, 6/7 September 2021. Keograms are commonly used to visualize changes in aurorae over time.]] | |||
Auroras change with time. Over the night they begin with glows and progress toward coronas, although they may not reach them. They tend to fade in the opposite order.<ref name="a-1994" /> Until about 1963, it was thought that these changes are due to the rotation of the Earth under a pattern fixed with respect to the Sun. Later, it was found by comparing all-sky films of auroras from different places (collected during the ]) that they often undergo global changes in a process called ]. They change in a few minutes from quiet arcs all along the auroral oval to active displays along the darkside and after 1–3 hours they gradually change back.<ref>{{cite book|last1=T.|first1=Potemra|last2=S.-I.|first2=Akasofu|title=Magnetospheric Substorms|date=1991|publisher=American Geophysical Union |location=Washington, D.C.|isbn=0-87590-030-5|page=5}}</ref> Changes in auroras over time are commonly visualized using ]s.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://blog.aurorasaurus.org/?p=1229|title=Eyes on the Aurora, Part 2: What is a Keogram?|website=Aurorasaurus|date=9 September 2020|accessdate=26 February 2022|archive-date=24 February 2022|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20220224164140/http://blog.aurorasaurus.org/?p=1229|url-status=live}}</ref> | |||
At shorter time scales, auroras can change their appearances and intensity, sometimes so slowly as to be difficult to notice, and at other times rapidly down to the sub-second scale.<ref name="yahnin-1997" /> The phenomenon of pulsating auroras is an example of intensity variations over short timescales, typically with periods of 2–20 seconds. This type of aurora is generally accompanied by decreasing peak emission heights of about 8 km for blue and green emissions and above average solar wind speeds ({{circa|500{{nbsp}}km/s}}).<ref>{{Cite journal|last1=Partamies|first1=N.|last2=Whiter|first2=D.|last3=Kadokura|first3=A.|last4=Kauristie|first4=K.|last5=Tyssøy|first5=H. Nesse|last6=Massetti|first6=S.|last7=Stauning|first7=P.|last8=Raita|first8=T.|date=2017|title=Occurrence and average behavior of pulsating aurora|journal=Journal of Geophysical Research: Space Physics|language=en|volume=122|issue=5|pages=5606–5618|doi=10.1002/2017JA024039|bibcode=2017JGRA..122.5606P|s2cid=38394431|issn=2169-9402|url=http://urn.fi/urn:nbn:fi-fe2019092429533|access-date=7 December 2019|archive-date=12 May 2024|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20240512165123/https://oulurepo.oulu.fi/handle/10024/24149|url-status=live}}</ref> | |||
Still, neither B<sub>z</sub> nor the solar wind can fully explain the seasonal behavior of geomagnetic storms. Those factors together contribute only about one-third of the observed semiannual variations. | |||
=== Other auroral radiation === | |||
==Auroral events of historical significance== | |||
In addition, the aurora and associated currents produce a strong radio emission around 150 kHz known as ] (AKR), discovered in 1972.<ref>{{cite journal|last1=Gurnett|first1=D.A.|title=The Earth as a radio source|journal=Journal of Geophysical Research|year=1974|volume=79|issue=28|page=4227|bibcode=1974JGR....79.4227G|doi=10.1029/JA079i028p04227 }}</ref> Ionospheric absorption makes AKR only observable from space. X-ray emissions, originating from the particles associated with auroras, have also been detected.<ref>{{cite journal|last1=Anderson|first1=K. A.|title=Balloon observations of X-rays in the auroral zone|journal=Journal of Geophysical Research|year=1960|volume=65|issue=2|pages=551–564|doi=10.1029/jz065i002p00551|bibcode=1960JGR....65..551A }}</ref> | |||
The auroras which occurred as a result of the "]" on both August 28 and September 2, 1859 are thought to be perhaps the most spectacular ever witnessed throughout recent recorded history. ], in a paper <ref name="BSp1"> by Balfour Stewart, Proceedings of the Royal Society of London, Vol. 11, (1860 - 1862), pp. 407-410</ref><ref name="BSp2"> by Balfour Stewart, Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society of London, Vol. 151, (1861), pp. 423-430 </ref> to the ] on November 21, 1861, described both auroral events as documented by a self-recording ] at the ] and established the connection between the September 2, 1859 auroral storm and the ]-Hodgson flare event when he observed that “it is not impossible to suppose that in this case our luminary was taken ''in the act''.” The second auroral event, which occurred on September 2, 1859 as a result of the exceptionally intense ]-Hodgson white light ] on September 1, 1859 produced aurora so widespread and extraordinarily brilliant that they were seen and reported in published scientific measurements, ship's logs and newspapers throughout the ], Europe, ] and ]. It was reported by the '']'' | |||
<ref name="NYT1"> Mr. Meriam's Observations on the Aurora--E. M. Picks Up a Piece of the Auroral Light. The Aurora as Seen Elsewhere--Remarkable Electrical Effects.; New York Time, August 30, 1859, Tuesday; Page 1, 3087 words</ref><ref name="NYT2"> Mr. Merlam's Opinions on the Bareul Light--One of his Friends Finds a Place of the Aurora on his Lion-corp. The Aurural Display in Boston.; New York Times, September 3, 1859, Saturday; Page 4, 1150 words</ref><ref name="NYT3">; New York Times, September 5, 1859, Monday; Page 2, 1683 words</ref> | |||
that in ] on Friday September 2, 1859 the Aurora was "so brilliant that at about one o'clock ordinary print could be read by the ]"<ref name="NYT2" /><ref name="ADVSR1"> Advances in Space Research, Volume 38, Issue 2, 2006, Pages 145-154, Green, et al.</ref><ref> 1859, Page 132, Ryerson, et al.</ref>. One o’clock Boston time on Friday September 2, would have been 6:00 GMT and the self-recording ] at the ] was recording the ], which was then one hour old, at its full intensity; this is amazingly accurate news reporting. Between 1859 and 1862 ] published a series of nine papers on the ] in the ] where he collected world wide reports of the auroral event. The aurora is thought to have been produced by one of the most intense ]s in history, very near the maximum intensity that the Sun is thought to be capable of producing. It is also notable for the fact that it is the first time where the phenomena of auroral activity and electricity were unambiguously linked. This insight was made possible not only due to scientific ] measurements of the era but also as a result of a significant portion of the {{convert|125000|mi|km}} of ] lines then in service being significantly disrupted for many hours throughout the storm. Some telegraph lines however, seem to have been of the appropriate length and orientation which allowed a current (]) to be induced in them (due to Earth's severely fluctuating ]) and actually used for communication. The following conversation occurred between two operators of the American Telegraph Line between ] and ], on the night of September 2, 1859 and reported in the ''Boston Traveler'': | |||
=== Noise === | |||
{{Quotation|'''Boston operator (to Portland operator):''' "Please cut off your battery entirely for fifteen minutes."<br /> | |||
Aurora ], similar to a crackling noise, begins about {{convert|70|m|ft|abbr=on}} above Earth's surface and is caused by charged particles in an ] layer of the atmosphere formed during a cold night. The charged particles discharge when particles from the Sun hit the inversion layer, creating the noise.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://news.nationalgeographic.com/2016/06/auroras-sounds-noises-explained-earth-space-astronomy|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20160627153140/http://news.nationalgeographic.com/2016/06/auroras-sounds-noises-explained-earth-space-astronomy/|url-status=dead|archive-date=27 June 2016|title=Auroras Make Weird Noises, and Now We Know Why|date=27 June 2016|access-date=28 June 2016}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|url=http://elec.aalto.fi/en/current/news/2016-06-22/|title=News: Acoustics researcher finds explanation for auroral sounds|date=21 June 2016|access-date=28 June 2016|archive-date=1 July 2016|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20160701115415/http://elec.aalto.fi/en/current/news/2016-06-22/|url-status=live}}</ref> | |||
'''Portland operator:''' "Will do so. It is now disconnected."<br /> | |||
'''Boston:''' "Mine is disconnected, and we are working with the auroral current. How do you receive my writing?"<br> | |||
'''Portland:''' "Better than with our batteries on. - Current comes and goes gradually."<br /> | |||
'''Boston:''' "My current is very strong at times, and we can work better without the batteries, as the aurora seems to neutralize and augment our batteries alternately, making current too strong at times for our relay magnets. Suppose we work without batteries while we are affected by this trouble."<br /> | |||
'''Portland:''' "Very well. Shall I go ahead with business?"<br /> | |||
'''Boston:''' "Yes. Go ahead."}} | |||
=== Unusual types === | |||
The conversation was carried on for around two hours using no battery power at all and working solely with the current induced by the aurora, and it was said that this was the first time on record that more than a word or two was transmitted in such manner.<ref name="ADVSR1" /> Such events led to the general conclusion that | |||
==== STEVE ==== | |||
{{Quotation|The effect of the Aurora on the electric telegraph is generally to increase or diminish the electric current generated in working the wires. Sometimes it entirely neutralizes them, so that, in effect, no fluid is discoverable in them . The aurora borealis seems to be composed of a mass of electric matter, resembling in every respect, that generated by the electric ]. The currents from it change coming on the wires, and then disappear: the mass of the aurora rolls from the horizon to the zenith.<ref>''The British Colonist'', Vol. 2 No. 56, October 19, 1859, page 1, accessed online at http://britishcolonist.ca/display.php?issue=18591019&pages=001,&terms=aurora, on February 19, 2009.</ref>}} | |||
In 2016, more than fifty ] observations described what was to them an unknown type of aurora which they named "]", for "Strong Thermal Emission Velocity Enhancement". STEVE is not an aurora but is caused by a {{convert|25|km|mi|abbr=on}} wide ribbon of hot ] at an altitude of {{convert|450|km|mi|abbr=on}}, with a temperature of {{convert|3000|C|K F|abbr=on}} and flowing at a speed of {{convert|6|km/s|mi/s|abbr=on}} (compared to {{convert|10|m/s|ft/s|abbr=on}} outside the ribbon).<ref>{{Cite news|url=https://phys.org/news/2018-08-kind-aurora.html|title=New kind of aurora is not an aurora at all|last=American Geophysical Union|date=20 August 2018|work=Phys.org|access-date=21 August 2018|archive-date=30 March 2022|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20220330051224/https://phys.org/news/2018-08-kind-aurora.html|url-status=live}}</ref> | |||
==== Picket-fence aurora ==== | |||
==Origin== | |||
The processes that cause STEVE are also associated with a picket-fence aurora, although the latter can be seen without STEVE.<ref>{{cite web|last1=Andrews|first1=Robin George|title=Steve the odd 'aurora' revealed to be two sky shows in one|url=https://www.nationalgeographic.com/science/2019/05/odd-aurora-named-steve-revealed-to-be-two-different-sky-shows-in-one/|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20190504000133/https://www.nationalgeographic.com/science/2019/05/odd-aurora-named-steve-revealed-to-be-two-different-sky-shows-in-one/|url-status=dead|archive-date=4 May 2019|website=National Geographic|access-date=4 May 2019|date=3 May 2019}}</ref><ref name="nishimura-2019">{{cite journal|last1=Nishimura|first1=Y.|last2=Gallardo-Lacourt|first2=B.|last3=Zou|first3=Y.|last4=Mishin|first4=E.|last5=Knudsen|first5=D. J.|last6=Donovan|first6=E. F.|last7=Angelopoulos|first7=V.|last8=Raybell|first8=R.|title=Magnetospheric signatures of STEVE: Implication for the magnetospheric energy source and inter-hemispheric conjugacy|journal=Geophysical Research Letters|volume=46|issue=11|pages=5637–5644|date=16 April 2019|doi=10.1029/2019GL082460|bibcode=2019GeoRL..46.5637N|doi-access=free }}</ref> It is an aurora because it is caused by precipitation of electrons in the atmosphere but it appears outside the auroral oval,<ref>{{cite web|last1=Lipuma|first1=Lauren|title=Scientists discover what powers celestial phenomenon STEVE|url=https://news.agu.org/press-release/scientists-discover-what-powers-celestial-phenomenon-steve/|website=AGU News|publisher=American Geophysical Union|access-date=4 May 2019|archive-date=4 May 2019|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20190504103127/https://news.agu.org/press-release/scientists-discover-what-powers-celestial-phenomenon-steve/|url-status=live}}</ref> closer to the ] than typical auroras.<ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.theguardian.com/science/shortcuts/2018/mar/19/steve-mystery-purple-aura-rivals-northern-lights-alberta-canada-nasa|title='Steve': the mystery purple aurora that rivals the northern lights|last=Saner|first=Emine|date=19 March 2018|website=The Guardian|language=en|access-date=22 March 2018|archive-date=22 March 2018|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20180322013359/https://www.theguardian.com/science/shortcuts/2018/mar/19/steve-mystery-purple-aura-rivals-northern-lights-alberta-canada-nasa|url-status=live}}</ref> When the picket-fence aurora appears with STEVE, it is below.<ref name="nishimura-2019" /> | |||
], 2005) as captured by NASA's ] satellite, digitally overlaid onto the '']'' composite image. | |||
] created using the same satellite data is also available.]] | |||
==== Dune aurora ==== | |||
The ultimate energy source of the aurora is the solar wind flowing past the Earth. The magnetosphere and solar wind consist of ] (ionized gas), which conducts electricity. It is well known (since ]'s work around 1830) that when an electrical conductor is placed within a magnetic field while relative motion occurs in a direction that the conductor cuts ''across'' (or is cut ''by''), rather than ''along'', the lines of the magnetic field, an electrical current is said to be induced into that conductor and electrons will flow within it. The amount of current flow is dependent upon a) the rate of relative motion and b) the strength of the magnetic field, c) the number of conductors ganged together and d) the distance between the conductor and the magnetic field, while the ''direction'' of flow is dependent upon the direction of relative motion. ]s make use of this basic process ("the ]"), any and all conductors, solid or otherwise are so affected including plasmas or other fluids. | |||
First reported in 2020,<ref>{{Cite journal|title=Citizen Scientists Discover a New Auroral Form: Dunes Provide Insight Into the Upper Atmosphere|url=https://agupubs.onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1029/2019AV000133|journal=AGU Advances|year=2020|doi=10.1029/2019AV000133|last1=Palmroth|first1=M.|last2=Grandin|first2=M.|last3=Helin|first3=M.|last4=Koski|first4=P.|last5=Oksanen|first5=A.|last6=Glad|first6=M. A.|last7=Valonen|first7=R.|last8=Saari|first8=K.|last9=Bruus|first9=E.|last10=Norberg|first10=J.|last11=Viljanen|first11=A.|last12=Kauristie|first12=K.|last13=Verronen|first13=P. T.|volume=1|hdl=10138/322003|s2cid=213839228|hdl-access=free|access-date=22 May 2021|archive-date=22 May 2021|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20210522031541/https://agupubs.onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1029/2019AV000133|url-status=live}}</ref><ref>{{Cite journal|title=Citizen scientists discover a new form of the Northern Lights|url=https://phys.org/news/2020-01-citizen-scientists-northern.html|website=phys.org|access-date=22 May 2021|archive-date=22 May 2021|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20210522031539/https://phys.org/news/2020-01-citizen-scientists-northern.html|url-status=live}}</ref> and confirmed in 2021,<ref name="grandin-2021">{{Cite journal|title=Large-Scale Dune Aurora Event Investigation Combining Citizen Scientists' Photographs and Spacecraft Observations|journal=AGU Advances|year=2021|doi=10.1029/2020AV000338|last1=Grandin|first1=Maxime|last2=Palmroth|first2=Minna|last3=Whipps|first3=Graeme|last4=Kalliokoski|first4=Milla|last5=Ferrier|first5=Mark|last6=Paxton|first6=Larry J.|last7=Mlynczak|first7=Martin G.|last8=Hilska|first8=Jukka|last9=Holmseth|first9=Knut|last10=Vinorum|first10=Kjetil|last11=Whenman|first11=Barry|volume=2|issue=2|pages=EGU21-5986|bibcode=2021EGUGA..23.5986G|doi-access=free}}</ref><ref>{{Cite news|title=Confirmation of an auroral phenomenon|url=https://phys.org/news/2021-05-auroral-phenomenon.html|website=phys.org|access-date=22 May 2021|archive-date=22 May 2021|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20210522031540/https://phys.org/news/2021-05-auroral-phenomenon.html|url-status=live}}</ref> the dune aurora phenomenon was discovered<ref>{{cite web|url=http://blog.aurorasaurus.org/?p=1461|title=The discovery of the auroral dunes: How one thing led to another|website=Aurorasaurus|access-date=22 May 2021|archive-date=13 May 2021|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20210513151346/http://blog.aurorasaurus.org/?p=1461|url-status=live}}</ref> by Finnish ]. It consists of regularly-spaced, parallel stripes of brighter emission in the green diffuse aurora which give the impression of sand dunes.<ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=F6xM-XY6NYg| archive-url=https://ghostarchive.org/varchive/youtube/20211211/F6xM-XY6NYg| archive-date=11 December 2021| url-status=live|title=Revontulien 'dyynit', uusia löydöksiä – Aurora 'dunes' revisited|website=YouTube| date=4 May 2021}}{{cbignore}}</ref> The phenomenon is believed to be caused by the modulation of atomic oxygen density by a large-scale atmospheric wave travelling horizontally in a waveguide through an ] layer in the ] in presence of ].<ref name="grandin-2021" /> | |||
In particular the solar wind and the magnetosphere are two electrically conducting fluids with such relative motion and should be able (in principle) to generate electric currents by "dynamo action", in the process also extracting energy from the flow of the solar wind. The process is hampered by the fact that plasmas conduct easily along magnetic field lines, but not so easily perpendicular to them. So it is important that a temporary magnetic connection be established between the field lines of the solar wind and those of the magnetosphere, by a process known as ]. It happens most easily with a southward slant of interplanetary field lines, because then field lines north of Earth approximately match the direction of field lines near the ] (namely, ''into'' Earth), and similarly near the ]. Indeed, active auroras (and related "substorms") are much more likely at such times. Electric currents originating in such way apparently give auroral electrons their energy. The magnetospheric plasma has an abundance of ]: some are magnetically trapped, some reside in the ], and some exist in the upward extension of the ], which may extend (with diminishing density) some 25,000 km around Earth. | |||
==== Horse-collar aurora ==== | |||
Bright auroras are generally associated with ]s (Schield et al., 1969;<ref>Schield, M. A.; Freeman, J. W.; & Dessler, A. J. (1969) "A Source for Field-Aligned Currents at Auroral Latitudes", ''Journal of Geophysical Research'', 74, 247-256.</ref> Zmuda and Armstrong, 1973<ref>Armstrong J. C., & Zmuda, A. J. (1973). "Triaxial magnetic measurements of field-aligned currents at 800 kilometers in the auroral region: Initial results", ''Journal of Geophysical Research'', 78, 6802-6807.</ref>) which flow down into the ionosphere on one side of the pole and out on the other. In between, some of the current connects directly through the ionospheric E layer (125 km); the rest ("region 2") detours, leaving again through field lines closer to the equator and closing through the "partial ring current" carried by magnetically trapped plasma. The ionosphere is an ], so such currents require a driving voltage, which some dynamo mechanism can supply. Electric field probes in orbit above the polar cap suggest voltages of the order of 40,000 volts, rising up to more than 200,000 volts during intense magnetic storms. | |||
Horse-collar auroras (HCA) are auroral features in which the auroral ellipse shifts poleward during the dawn and dusk portions and the polar cap becomes teardrop-shaped. They form during periods when the interplanetary magnetic field (IMF) is permanently northward, when the IMF clock angle is small. Their formation is associated with the closure of the magnetic flux at the top of the dayside magnetosphere by the double lobe reconnection (DLR). There are approximately 8 HCA events per month, with no seasonal dependence, and that the IMF must be within 30 degrees of northwards.<ref>{{Cite journal |last1=Bower |first1=G. E. |last2=Milan |first2=S. E. |last3=Paxton |first3=L. J. |last4=Anderson |first4=B. J. |date=May 2022 |title=Occurrence Statistics of Horse Collar Aurora |url=https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1029/2022JA030385 |journal=Journal of Geophysical Research: Space Physics |language=en |volume=127 |issue=5 |doi=10.1029/2022JA030385 |bibcode=2022JGRA..12730385B |s2cid=248842161 |issn=2169-9380 |hdl=11250/3055028 |hdl-access=free |access-date=1 December 2022 |archive-date=12 May 2024 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20240512165217/https://agupubs.onlinelibrary.wiley.com/action/ajaxShowRecommended?widgetId=5cf4c79f-0ae9-4dc5-96ce-77f62de7ada9&ajax=true&doi=10.1029%2F2022JA030385&pbContext=%3BrequestedJournal%3Ajournal%3A21699402%3Bjournal%3Ajournal%3A21562202a%3Bpage%3Astring%3AArticle%2FChapter+View%3Bctype%3Astring%3AJournal+Content%3Bwebsite%3Awebsite%3Aagupubs%3Bissue%3Aissue%3Adoi%5C%3A10.1002%2Fjgra.v127.5%3Barticle%3Aarticle%3Adoi%5C%3A10.1029%2F2022JA030385%3Bwgroup%3Astring%3APublication+Websites%3BpageGroup%3Astring%3APublication+Pages%3BsubPage%3Astring%3AFull+Text&widgetKey=ux3-publicationContent-widget_5cf4c79f-0ae9-4dc5-96ce-77f62de7ada9_3067_144859_en&accordionHeadingWrapper=h2 |url-status=live }}</ref> | |||
Ionospheric resistance has a complex nature, and leads to a secondary ] flow. By a strange twist of physics, the magnetic disturbance on the ground due to the main current almost cancels out, so most of the observed effect of auroras is due to a secondary current, the auroral electrojet. An auroral electrojet index (measured in nanotesla) is regularly derived from ground data and serves as a general measure of auroral activity. | |||
==== Conjugate auroras ==== | |||
However, ohmic resistance is not the only obstacle to current flow in this circuit. The convergence of magnetic field lines near Earth creates a "mirror effect" which turns back most of the down-flowing electrons (where currents flow upwards), inhibiting current-carrying capacity. To overcome this, part of the available voltage appears along the field line ("parallel to the field"), helping electrons overcome that obstacle by widening the bundle of trajectories reaching Earth; a similar "parallel potential" is used in "tandem mirror" plasma containment devices. A feature of such voltage is that it is concentrated near Earth (potential proportional to field intensity; Persson, 1963<ref>Persson, Hans (1963). "Electric field along a magnetic line of force in a low-density plasma", ''Physics of Fluids'', 6, 1756-1759.</ref>), and indeed, as deduced by Evans (1974) and confirmed by satellites, most auroral acceleration occurs below 10,000 km. Another indicator of parallel electric fields along field lines are beams of upwards flowing O+ ions observed on auroral field lines. | |||
Conjugate auroras are nearly exact mirror-image auroras found at ] in the northern and southern hemispheres on the same geomagnetic field lines. These generally happen at the time of the ]es, when there is little difference in the orientation of the north and south geomagnetic poles to the sun. Attempts were made to image conjugate auroras by aircraft from Alaska and New Zealand in 1967, 1968, 1970, and 1971, with some success.<ref>{{cite book |title=The Aurora Watcher's Handbook |pages=117–124 |first=Neil |last=Davis |publisher=University of Alaska Press |date=1992 |isbn=0-912006-60-9 }}</ref> | |||
== Causes == | |||
While this mechanism is ''probably'' the main source of the familiar auroral arcs, formations conspicuous from the ground, more energy might go to other, less prominent types of aurora, e.g. the diffuse aurora (below) and the low-energy electrons precipitated in magnetic storms (also below). | |||
A full understanding of the physical processes which lead to different types of auroras is still incomplete, but the basic cause involves the interaction of the ] with ]. The varying intensity of the solar wind produces effects of different magnitudes but includes one or more of the following physical scenarios. | |||
# A quiescent solar wind flowing past Earth's magnetosphere steadily interacts with it and can both inject solar wind particles directly onto the geomagnetic field lines that are 'open', as opposed to being 'closed' in the opposite hemisphere and provide diffusion through the ]. It can also cause particles already trapped in the ] to precipitate into the atmosphere. Once particles are lost to the atmosphere from the radiation belts, under quiet conditions, new ones replace them only slowly, and the loss-cone becomes depleted. In the magnetotail, however, particle trajectories seem constantly to reshuffle, probably when the particles cross the very weak magnetic field near the equator. As a result, the flow of electrons in that region is nearly the same in all directions ("isotropic") and assures a steady supply of leaking electrons. The leakage of electrons does not leave the tail positively charged, because each leaked electron lost to the atmosphere is replaced by a low energy electron drawn upward from the ]. Such replacement of "hot" electrons by "cold" ones is in complete accord with the ]. The complete process, which also generates an electric ring current around Earth, is uncertain. | |||
# Geomagnetic disturbance from an enhanced ] causes distortions of the ] ("magnetic substorms"). These 'substorms' tend to occur after prolonged spells (on the order of hours) during which the interplanetary magnetic field has had an appreciable southward component. This leads to a higher rate of interconnection between its field lines and those of Earth. As a result, the solar wind moves ] (tubes of magnetic field lines, 'locked' together with their resident plasma) from the day side of Earth to the magnetotail, widening the obstacle it presents to the solar wind flow and constricting the tail on the night-side. Ultimately some tail plasma can separate ("]"); some blobs ("]s") are squeezed downstream and are carried away with the solar wind; others are squeezed toward Earth where their motion feeds strong outbursts of auroras, mainly around midnight ("unloading process"). A geomagnetic storm resulting from greater interaction adds many more particles to the plasma trapped around Earth, also producing enhancement of the "ring current". Occasionally the resulting modification of Earth's magnetic field can be so strong that it produces auroras visible at middle latitudes, on field lines much closer to the equator than those of the auroral zone. | |||
#: ] and aurora]] | |||
# Acceleration of auroral charged particles invariably accompanies a magnetospheric disturbance that causes an aurora. This mechanism, which is believed to predominantly arise from strong electric fields along the magnetic field or wave-particle interactions, raises the velocity of a particle in the direction of the guiding magnetic field. The pitch angle is thereby decreased and increases the chance of it being precipitated into the atmosphere. Both electromagnetic and electrostatic waves, produced at the time of greater geomagnetic disturbances, make a significant contribution to the energizing processes that sustain an aurora. Particle acceleration provides a complex intermediate process for transferring energy from the solar wind indirectly into the atmosphere. | |||
] satellite, digitally overlaid onto '']'' composite image. | |||
] created using the same satellite data is also available.]] | |||
] ] team. ] is visible to the bottom left.]] | |||
The details of these phenomena are not fully understood. However, it is clear that the prime source of auroral particles is the solar wind feeding the magnetosphere, the reservoir containing the radiation zones and temporarily magnetically trapped particles confined by the geomagnetic field, coupled with particle acceleration processes.<ref>{{cite book|last1=Burch|first1=J L|editor1-last=Akasofu S–I and Y Kamide|title=The solar wind and the Earth|date=1987|publisher=D. Reidel|isbn=978-90-277-2471-7|page=103}}</ref> | |||
=== Auroral particles === | |||
Some O+ ions ("conics") also seem accelerated in different ways by plasma processes associated with the aurora. These ions are accelerated by plasma waves, in directions mainly perpendicular to the field lines. They therefore start at their own "mirror points" and can travel only upwards. As they do so, the "mirror effect" transforms their directions of motion, from perpendicular to the line to lying on a cone around it, which gradually narrows down. | |||
The immediate cause of the ionization and excitation of atmospheric constituents leading to auroral emissions was discovered in 1960, when a pioneering rocket flight from Fort Churchill in Canada revealed a flux of electrons entering the atmosphere from above.<ref>{{cite journal|last1=McIlwain|first1=C E|title=Direct Measurement of Particles Producing Visible Auroras|journal=Journal of Geophysical Research|year=1960|volume=65|issue=9|page=2727|doi=10.1029/JZ065i009p02727|bibcode=1960JGR....65.2727M}}</ref> Since then an extensive collection of measurements has been acquired painstakingly and with steadily improving resolution since the 1960s by many research teams using rockets and satellites to traverse the auroral zone. The main findings have been that auroral arcs and other bright forms are due to electrons that have been accelerated during the final few 10,000 km or so of their plunge into the atmosphere.<ref>{{Cite journal|doi=10.1029/JA093iA07p07441|title=Determination of auroral electrostatic potentials using high- and low-altitude particle distributions|journal=Journal of Geophysical Research|volume=93|issue=A7|page=7441|year=1988|last1=Reiff|first1=P. H.|last2=Collin|first2=H. L.|last3=Craven|first3=J. D.|last4=Burch|first4=J. L.|last5=Winningham|first5=J. D.|last6=Shelley|first6=E. G.|last7=Frank|first7=L. A.|last8=Friedman|first8=M. A.|bibcode=1988JGR....93.7441R }}</ref> These electrons often, but not always, exhibit a peak in their energy distribution, and are preferentially aligned along the local direction of the magnetic field. | |||
Electrons mainly responsible for diffuse and pulsating auroras have, in contrast, a smoothly falling energy distribution, and an angular (pitch-angle) distribution favouring directions perpendicular to the local magnetic field. Pulsations were discovered to originate at or close to the equatorial crossing point of auroral zone magnetic field lines.<ref>{{Cite journal|doi=10.1038/215045a0|title=Evidence for Velocity Dispersion in Auroral Electrons|journal=Nature|volume=215|issue=5096|page=45|year=1967|last1=Bryant|first1=D. A.|last2=Collin|first2=H. L.|last3=Courtier|first3=G. M.|last4=Johnstone|first4=A. D.|bibcode=1967Natur.215...45B|s2cid=4173665 }}</ref> Protons are also associated with auroras, both discrete and diffuse. | |||
In addition, the aurora and associated currents produce a strong radio emission around 150 kHz known as ] (AKR, discovered in 1972). Ionospheric absorption makes AKR observable from space only. | |||
=== Atmosphere === | |||
These "parallel potentials" accelerate electrons to auroral energies and seem to be a major source of aurora. Other mechanisms have also been proposed, in particular, ], wave modes involving the magnetic field first noted by ] (1942), which have been observed in the lab and in space. The question is however whether these waves might just be a different way of looking at the above process, because this approach does not point out a different energy source, and many plasma bulk phenomena can also be described in terms of Alfvén waves. | |||
Auroras result from emissions of ]s in Earth's upper ], above {{convert|80|km|mi|abbr=on}}, from ] ] atoms regaining an electron, and ] atoms and ] based molecules returning from an ] to ].<ref>{{cite web|title=Ultraviolet Waves|url=http://missionscience.nasa.gov/ems/10_ultravioletwaves.html|url-status=dead|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110127004149/http://missionscience.nasa.gov/ems/10_ultravioletwaves.html|archive-date=27 January 2011}}</ref> They are ionized or excited by the collision of particles precipitated into the atmosphere. Both incoming electrons and protons may be involved. Excitation energy is lost within the atmosphere by the emission of a photon, or by collision with another atom or molecule: | |||
{{wikinews|Aurora Borealis caused by electrical space tornadoes}} | |||
;] emissions: green or orange-red, depending on the amount of energy absorbed. | |||
Other processes are also involved in the aurora, and much remains to be learned. Auroral electrons created by large geomagnetic storms often seem to have energies below 1 keV, and are stopped higher up, near 200 km. Such low energies excite mainly the red line of oxygen, so that often such auroras are red. On the other hand, positive ions also reach the ionosphere at such time, with energies of 20-30 keV, suggesting they might be an "overflow" along magnetic field lines of the copious "ring current" ions accelerated at such times, by processes different from the ones described above. | |||
;] emissions:blue, purple or red; blue and purple if the molecule regains an electron after it has been ionized, red if returning to ground state from an excited state. | |||
Oxygen is unusual in terms of its return to ground state: it can take 0.7 seconds to emit the 557.7 nm green light and up to two minutes for the red 630.0 nm emission. Collisions with other atoms or molecules absorb the excitation energy and prevent emission; this process is called ]. Because the highest parts of the atmosphere contain a higher percentage of oxygen and lower particle densities, such collisions are rare enough to allow time for oxygen to emit red light. Collisions become more frequent progressing down into the atmosphere due to increasing density, so that red emissions do not have time to happen, and eventually, even green light emissions are prevented. | |||
==Sources and types== | |||
{{speculation}} | |||
]]] | |||
Again, our understanding is very incomplete. A rough guess may point out three main sources: | |||
# ] with the solar wind ''flowing past Earth'', possibly producing quiet auroral arcs ("directly driven" process). The circuit of the accelerating currents and their connection to the solar wind are uncertain. | |||
# Dynamo action involving plasma squeezed towards Earth by sudden convulsions of the ] ("magnetic substorms"). Substorms tend to occur after prolonged spells (hours) during which the interplanetary magnetic field has an appreciable southward component, leading to a high rate of interconnection between its field lines and those of Earth. As a result the solar wind moves ] (tubes of magnetic field lines, moving together with their resident plasma) from the day side of Earth to the magnetotail, widening the obstacle it presents to the solar wind flow and causing it to be squeezed harder. Ultimately the tail plasma is torn ("]"); some blobs ("]s") are squeezed tailwards and are carried away with the solar wind; others are squeezed towards Earth where their motion feeds large outbursts of aurora, mainly around midnight ("unloading process"). Geomagnetic storms have similar effects, but with greater vigor. The big difference is the addition of many particles to the plasma trapped around Earth, enhancing the "ring current" which it carries. The resulting modification of Earth's field allows aurora to be visible at middle latitudes, on field lines much closer to the equator. | |||
# Satellite images of the aurora from above show a "ring of fire" along the auroral oval (see above), often widest at midnight. That is the "diffuse aurora", not distinct enough to be seen by the eye. It does ''not'' seem to be associated with acceleration by electric currents (although currents and their arcs may be embedded in it) but to be due to electrons leaking out of the magnetotail. | |||
] | |||
This is why there is a colour differential with altitude; at high altitudes oxygen red dominates, then oxygen green and nitrogen blue/purple/red, then finally nitrogen blue/purple/red when collisions prevent oxygen from emitting anything. Green is the most common colour. Then comes pink, a mixture of light green and red, followed by pure red, then yellow (a mixture of red and green), and finally, pure blue. | |||
Any magnetic trapping is leaky—there always exists a bundle of directions ("loss cone") around the guiding magnetic field lines where particles are not trapped but escape. In the ] of Earth, once particles on such trajectories are gone, new ones only replace them very slowly, leaving such directions nearly "empty". In the magnetotail, however, particle trajectories seem to be constantly reshuffled, probably when the particles cross the very weak field near the equator. As a result, the flow of electrons in all directions is nearly the same ("isotropic"), and that assures a steady supply of leaking electrons. | |||
Precipitating protons generally produce optical emissions as incident ] atoms after gaining electrons from the atmosphere. Proton auroras are usually observed at lower latitudes.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://auspace.athabascau.ca/handle/2149/518|title=Simultaneous ground and satellite observations of an isolated proton arc at sub-auroral latitudes|publisher=Journal of Geophysical Research|date=2007|access-date=5 August 2015|archive-date=5 August 2015|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20150805154623/http://auspace.athabascau.ca/handle/2149/518|url-status=live}}</ref> | |||
The energization of such electrons comes from magnetotail processes. The leakage of negative electrons does not leave the tail positively charged, because each leaked electron lost to the atmosphere is quickly replaced by a low energy electron drawn upwards from the ionosphere. Such replacement of "hot" electrons by "cold" ones is in complete accord with the ]. | |||
=== Ionosphere === | |||
Other types of aurora have been observed from space, e.g.{{Fact|date=September 2007}} "poleward arcs" stretching sunward across the polar cap, the related "theta aurora", and "dayside arcs" near noon. These are relatively infrequent and poorly understood. There are other interesting effects such as flickering aurora, "black aurora" and subvisual red arcs. In addition to all these, a weak glow (often deep red) has been observed around the two ]s, the "funnels" of field lines separating the ones that close on the day side of Earth from lines swept into the tail. The cusps allow a small amount of solar wind to reach the top of the atmosphere, producing an auroral glow. | |||
Bright auroras are generally associated with ]s (Schield et al., 1969;<ref>{{cite journal|doi=10.1029/JA074i001p00247|last1=Schield|first1=M. A.|last2=Freeman|first2=J. W.|last3=Dessler|first3=A. J.|year=1969|title=A Source for Field-Aligned Currents at Auroral Latitudes|journal=Journal of Geophysical Research|volume=74|issue=1|pages=247–256|bibcode=1969JGR....74..247S}}</ref> Zmuda and Armstrong, 1973<ref>{{cite journal|doi=10.1029/JA078i028p06802|last1=Armstrong|first1=J. C.|last2=Zmuda|first2=A. J.|year=1973|title=Triaxial magnetic measurements of field-aligned currents at 800 kilometers in the auroral region: Initial results|journal=Journal of Geophysical Research|volume=78|issue=28|pages=6802–6807|bibcode=1973JGR....78.6802A}}</ref>), which flow down into the ionosphere on one side of the pole and out on the other. In between, some of the current connects directly through the ionospheric E layer (125 km); the rest ("region 2") detours, leaving again through field lines closer to the equator and closing through the "partial ring current" carried by magnetically trapped plasma. The ionosphere is an ], so some consider that such currents require a driving voltage, which an, as yet unspecified, dynamo mechanism can supply. Electric field probes in orbit above the polar cap suggest voltages of the order of 40,000 volts, rising up to more than 200,000 volts during intense magnetic storms. In another interpretation, the currents are the direct result of electron acceleration into the atmosphere by wave/particle interactions. | |||
Ionospheric resistance has a complex nature, and leads to a secondary ] flow. By a strange twist of physics, the magnetic disturbance on the ground due to the main current almost cancels out, so most of the observed effect of auroras is due to a secondary current, the auroral ]. An auroral electrojet index (measured in nanotesla) is regularly derived from ground data and serves as a general measure of auroral activity. ]<ref>{{cite book|last=Birkeland|first=Kristian|title=The Norwegian Aurora Polaris Expedition 1902–1903|date=1908|publisher=H. Aschehoug & Co.|location=New York: Christiania (Oslo)|page=720|url=https://archive.org/details/norwegianaurorap01chririch}} out-of-print, full text online</ref> deduced that the currents flowed in the east–west directions along the auroral arc, and such currents, flowing from the dayside toward (approximately) midnight were later named "auroral electrojets" (see also ]s). Ionosphere can contribute to the formation of auroral arcs via the ] instability under high ionospheric resistance conditions, observed at night time and in dark Winter hemisphere.<ref>{{cite journal|last1=Pokhotelov|first1=D.|last2=Lotko|first2=W. |last3=Streltsov|first3=A.V.|title= Effects of the seasonal asymmetry in ionospheric Pedersen conductance on the appearance of discrete aurora | journal=Geophys. Res. Lett. |date=2002|volume=29|issue=10|pages=79-1-79-4|doi=10.1029/2001GL014010|bibcode=2002GeoRL..29.1437P |s2cid=123637108 |doi-access=free}}</ref> | |||
== On other planets == | |||
] aurora. The bright spot at far left is the end of field line to Io; spots at bottom lead to ] and ].]] | |||
== Interaction of the solar wind with Earth == | |||
Both ] and ] have magnetic fields much stronger than Earth's (Jupiter's equatorial field strength is 4.3 gauss, compared to 0.3 gauss for Earth), and both have large radiation belts. Aurora has been observed on both, most clearly with the ]. Uranus and Neptune have also been observed to have auroras.<ref name="autogenerated1"></ref> | |||
Earth is constantly immersed in the ], a flow of magnetized hot plasma (a gas of free electrons and positive ions) emitted by the Sun in all directions, a result of the two-million-degree temperature of the Sun's outermost layer, the ]. The solar wind reaches Earth with a velocity typically around 400 km/s, a density of around 5 ions/cm<sup>3</sup> and a magnetic field intensity of around 2–5 nT (for comparison, Earth's surface field is typically 30,000–50,000 nT). During ]s, in particular, flows can be several times faster; the ] (IMF) may also be much stronger. ] deduced in the 1970s that the long-term averages of solar wind speed correlated with geomagnetic activity.<ref>{{cite journal|url=https://ntrs.nasa.gov/search.jsp?R=19770051690|title=On the high correlation between long-term averages of solar wind speed and geomagnetic activity|journal=Journal of Geophysical Research|author1=Crooker, N. U.|author2=Feynman, J.|author3=Gosling, J. T.|date=1 May 1977|volume=82|issue=13|page=1933|doi=10.1029/JA082i013p01933|bibcode=1977JGR....82.1933C|access-date=10 November 2017|archive-date=4 November 2016|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20161104205820/https://ntrs.nasa.gov/search.jsp?R=19770051690|url-status=live}}</ref> Her work resulted from data collected by the ] spacecraft. | |||
The solar wind and magnetosphere consist of ] (ionized gas), which conducts electricity. It is well known (since ]'s work around 1830) that when an electrical conductor is placed within a magnetic field while relative motion occurs in a direction that the conductor cuts ''across'' (or is cut ''by''), rather than ''along'', the lines of the magnetic field, an electric current is induced within the conductor. The strength of the current depends on a) the rate of relative motion, b) the strength of the magnetic field, c) the number of conductors ganged together and d) the distance between the conductor and the magnetic field, while the ''direction'' of flow is dependent upon the direction of relative motion. ]s make use of this basic process ("the ]"), any and all conductors, solid or otherwise are so affected, including plasmas and other fluids. | |||
The auroras on the gas giants seem, like Earth's, to be powered by the solar wind. In addition, however, Jupiter's moons, especially ], are powerful sources of auroras on Jupiter. These arise from electric currents along field lines ("field aligned currents"), generated by a dynamo mechanism due to the relative motion between the rotating planet and the moving moon. Io, which has active volcanism and an ionosphere, is a particularly strong source, and its currents also generate radio emissions, studied since 1955. Auroras have also been observed on ], Europa, and Ganymede themselves, e.g., using the ]. These are generated when Jupiter's magnetospheric plasma impact their very thin atmospheres. | |||
The IMF originates on the Sun, linked to the ]s, and its ] are dragged out by the solar wind. That alone would tend to line them up in the Sun-Earth direction, but the rotation of the Sun angles them at Earth by about 45 degrees forming a spiral in the ecliptic plane, known as the ]. The field lines passing Earth are therefore usually linked to those near the western edge ("limb") of the visible Sun at any time.<ref> {{webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20061220050940/http://gse.gi.alaska.edu/recent/javascript_movie.html|date=20 December 2006 }}, Solar wind forecast from a ] website</ref> | |||
Auroras have also been observed on Venus and Mars. Because Venus has no intrinsic (planetary) magnetic field, Venusian auroras appear as bright and diffuse patches of varying shape and intensity, sometimes distributed across the full planetary disc. Venusian auroras are produced by the impact of electrons originating from the solar wind and precipitating in the night-side atmosphere. An aurora was also detected on Mars, on August 14, 2004, by the ] instrument aboard ]. The aurora was located at ], in the region of 177° East, 52° South. The total size of the emission region was about 30 km across, and possibly about 8 km high. By analyzing a map of crustal magnetic anomalies compiled with data from ], scientists observed that the region of the emissions corresponded to an area where the strongest magnetic field is localized. This correlation indicates that the origin of the light emission actually was a flux of electrons moving along the crust magnetic lines and exciting the upper atmosphere of Mars.<ref name="autogenerated1" /><ref></ref> | |||
The solar wind and the magnetosphere, being two electrically conducting fluids in relative motion, should be able in principle to generate electric currents by dynamo action and impart energy from the flow of the solar wind. However, this process is hampered by the fact that plasmas conduct readily along magnetic field lines, but less readily perpendicular to them. Energy is more effectively transferred by the temporary magnetic connection between the field lines of the solar wind and those of the magnetosphere. Unsurprisingly this process is known as ]. As already mentioned, it happens most readily when the interplanetary field is directed southward, in a similar direction to the geomagnetic field in the inner regions of both the ] and ]. | |||
== History of aurora theories == | |||
In the past theories have been proposed to explain the phenomenon. These theories are now obsolete. | |||
Auroras are more frequent and brighter during the intense phase of the solar cycle when ] increase the intensity of the solar wind.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.nasa.gov/worldbook/aurora_worldbook.html|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20050905165404/http://www.nasa.gov/worldbook/aurora_worldbook.html|url-status=dead|archive-date=5 September 2005|title=NASA – NASA and World Book|publisher=Nasa.gov|date=7 February 2011|access-date=26 July 2011}}</ref> | |||
* ] theorized that the "mystery of the Northern Lights" was caused by a concentration of electrical charges in the polar regions intensified by the snow and other moisture.<ref></ref> | |||
* Auroral electrons come from beams emitted by the Sun. This was claimed around 1900 by ], whose experiments in a vacuum chamber with electron beams and magnetized spheres (miniature models of Earth or "terrellas") showed that such electrons would be guided towards the polar regions. Problems with this model included absence of aurora at the poles themselves, self-dispersal of such beams by their negative charge, and more recently, lack of any observational evidence in space. | |||
* The aurora is the overflow of the ] ("leaky bucket theory"). This was first disproved around 1962 by ] and co-workers, who showed that the high rate at which energy was dissipated by the aurora would quickly drain all that was available in the radiation belt. Soon afterwards it became clear that most of the energy in trapped particles resided in positive ions, while auroral particles were almost always electrons, of relatively low energy. | |||
* The aurora is produced by ] particles guided by Earth's field lines to the top of the atmosphere. This holds true for the cusp aurora, but outside the cusp, the solar wind has no direct access. In addition, the main energy in the solar wind resides in positive ions; electrons only have about 0.5 eV (electron volt), and while in the cusp this may be raised to 50–100 eV, that still falls short of auroral energies. | |||
== |
=== Magnetosphere === | ||
]]] | |||
]]] | |||
Images of aurora are significantly more common today due to the rise of use of ]s that have high enough sensitivities.<ref></ref> Film and digital exposure to auroral displays is fraught with difficulties, particularly if faithfulness of reproduction is an objective. Due to the different spectral energy present, and changing dynamically throughout the exposure, the results are somewhat unpredictable. Different layers of the film emulsion respond differently to lower light levels, and choice of film can be very important. Longer exposures aggregate the rapidly changing energy and often blanket the dynamic attribute of a display. Higher sensitivity creates issues with graininess. | |||
Earth's ] is shaped by the impact of the solar wind on Earth's magnetic field. This forms an obstacle to the flow, diverting it, at an average distance of about 70,000 km (11 Earth radii or Re),<ref>{{cite journal|last1=Shue|first1=J.-H|first2=J. K.|last2=Chao|first3=H. C.|last3=Fu|first4=C. T.|last4=Russell|first5=P.|last5=Song|first6=K. K.|last6=Khurana|first7=H. J.|last7=Singer|title=A new functional form to study the solar wind control of the magnetopause size and shape|journal=J. Geophys. Res.|date=May 1997|volume=102|issue=A5|pages=9497–9511|doi=10.1029/97JA00196|bibcode=1997JGR...102.9497S }}</ref> producing a ] 12,000 km to 15,000 km (1.9 to 2.4 Re) further upstream. The width of the magnetosphere abreast of Earth is typically 190,000 km (30 Re), and on the night side a long "magnetotail" of stretched field lines extends to great distances (> 200 Re). | |||
] pioneered multiple exposure using multiple filters for astronomical photography, recombining the images in the laboratory to recreate the visual display more accurately. For scientific research, proxies are often used, such as ultra-violet, and re-coloured to simulate the appearance to humans. Predictive techniques are also used, to indicate the extent of the display, a highly useful tool for aurora hunters. Terrestrial features often find their way into aurora images, making them more accessible and more likely to be published by the major websites. <ref>http://www.spaceweather.com/index.cgi</ref> It is possible to take excellent images with standard film (using ] between 100 and 400) and a ] with full ], a fast lens (f1.4 50 mm, for example), and exposures between 10 and 30 seconds, depending on the aurora's display strength.<ref>http://www.spaceweather.com/aurora/images/24nov01/Moss1.jpg 2001 image</ref> | |||
The high latitude magnetosphere is filled with plasma as the solar wind passes Earth. The flow of plasma into the magnetosphere increases with additional turbulence, density, and speed in the solar wind. This flow is favoured by a southward component of the IMF, which can then directly connect to the high latitude geomagnetic field lines.<ref>{{cite journal|last1=Lyons|first1=L. R.|first2=H.-J.|last2=Kim|first3=X.|last3=Xing|first4=S.|last4=Zou|first5=D.-Y.|last5=Lee|first6=C.|last6=Heinselman|first7=M. J.|last7=Nicolls|first8=V.|last8=Angelopoulos|first9=D.|last9=Larson|first10=J.|last10=McFadden|first11=A.|last11=Runov|first12=K.-H.|last12=Fornacon|title=Evidence that solar wind fluctuations substantially affect global convection and substorm occurrence|journal=J. Geophys. Res.|year=2009|volume=114|issue=A11306|pages=1–14|doi=10.1029/2009JA014281|bibcode=2009JGRA..11411306L|doi-access=free }}</ref> The flow pattern of magnetospheric plasma is mainly from the magnetotail toward Earth, around Earth and back into the solar wind through the ] on the day-side. In addition to moving perpendicular to Earth's magnetic field, some magnetospheric plasma travels down along Earth's magnetic field lines, gains additional energy and loses it to the atmosphere in the auroral zones. The cusps of the magnetosphere, separating geomagnetic field lines that close through Earth from those that close remotely allow a small amount of solar wind to directly reach the top of the atmosphere, producing an auroral glow. | |||
Early work on the imaging of the Aurora was done in 1949 by the ] using the ] radar. | |||
On 26 February 2008, ] probes were able to determine, for the first time, the triggering event for the onset of ]s.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.nasa.gov/mission_pages/themis/auroras/themis_power.html|title=NASA – THEMIS Satellites Discover What Triggers Eruptions of the Northern Lights|publisher=Nasa.gov|access-date=26 July 2011| archive-url= https://web.archive.org/web/20110629043044/http://www.nasa.gov/mission_pages/themis/auroras/themis_power.html| archive-date= 29 June 2011| url-status=live}}</ref> Two of the five probes, positioned approximately one third the distance to the Moon, measured events suggesting a ] event 96 seconds prior to auroral intensification.<ref>{{cite journal|doi=10.1126/science.1160495|title=Tail Reconnection Triggering Substorm Onset|year=2008|last1=Angelopoulos|first1=V.|last2=McFadden|first2=J. P.|last3=Larson|first3=D.|last4=Carlson|first4=C. W.|last5=Mende|first5=S. B.|last6=Frey|first6=H.|last7=Phan|first7=T.|last8=Sibeck|first8=D. G.|last9=Glassmeier|first9=K.-H.|journal=Science|volume=321|issue=5891|pages=931–5|pmid=18653845|bibcode=2008Sci...321..931A|last10=Auster|first10=U.|last11=Donovan|first11=E.|last12=Mann|first12=I. R.|last13=Rae|first13=I. J.|last14=Russell|first14=C. T.|last15=Runov|first15=A.|last16=Zhou|first16=X.-Z.|last17=Kepko|first17=L.|s2cid=206514133 |doi-access=free}}</ref> | |||
== In folklore == | |||
]s that ignite auroras may occur more often during the months around the ]es. It is not well understood, but geomagnetic storms may vary with Earth's seasons. Two factors to consider are the tilt of both the solar and Earth's axis to the ecliptic plane. As Earth orbits throughout a year, it experiences an interplanetary magnetic field (IMF) from different latitudes of the Sun, which is tilted at 8 degrees. Similarly, the 23-degree tilt of Earth's axis about which the geomagnetic pole rotates with a diurnal variation changes the daily average angle that the geomagnetic field presents to the incident IMF throughout a year. These factors combined can lead to minor cyclical changes in the detailed way that the IMF links to the magnetosphere. In turn, this affects the average probability of opening a door{{Colloquialism|date=June 2021}} through which energy from the solar wind can reach Earth's inner magnetosphere and thereby enhance auroras. Recent evidence in 2021 has shown that individual separate substorms may in fact be correlated networked communities.<ref>{{cite journal|title=Network community structure of substorms using SuperMAG magnetometers, L. Orr, S. C. Chapman, J. W. Gjerloev & W. Guo|issue=1|page=1842|journal=Nature Communications|date=23 March 2021|volume=12|doi=10.1038/s41467-021-22112-4|last1=Orr|first1=L.|last2=Chapman|first2=S. C.|last3=Gjerloev|first3=J. W.|last4=Guo|first4=W.|pmid=33758181|pmc=7988152 }}</ref> | |||
In '']'' from 1855 by ] there is the claim that in ]: | |||
== Auroral particle acceleration == | |||
:''The ] are warlike virgins, mounted upon horses and armed with helmets and spears. /.../ When they ride forth on their errand, their armour sheds a strange flickering light, which flashes up over the northern skies, making what men call the "aurora borealis", or "Northern Lights". <ref></ref> | |||
Just as there are many types of aurora, there are many different mechanisms that accelerate auroral particles into the atmosphere. Electron aurora in Earth's auroral zone (i.e. commonly visible aurora) can be split into two main categories with different immediate causes: diffuse and discrete aurora. Diffuse aurora appear relatively structureless to an observer on the ground, with indistinct edges and amorphous forms. Discrete aurora are structured into distinct features with well-defined edges such as arcs, rays and coronas; they also tend to be much brighter than the diffuse aurora. | |||
While a striking notion, there is not a vast body of evidence in the Old Norse literature supporting this assertion. Although auroral activity is common over ] and ] today, it is possible that the Magnetic North Pole was considerably further away from this region during the centuries before the documentation of Norse mythology, thus explaining the lack of references.<ref></ref> | |||
In both cases, the electrons that eventually cause the aurora start out as electrons trapped by the magnetic field in Earth's ]. These ] bounce back and forth along ] and are prevented from hitting the atmosphere by the ] formed by the increasing magnetic field strength closer to Earth. The magnetic mirror's ability to trap a particle depends on the particle's ]: the angle between its direction of motion and the local magnetic field. An aurora is created by processes that decrease the pitch angle of many individual electrons, freeing them from the magnetic trap and causing them to hit the atmosphere. | |||
The first Old Norse account of ''norðurljós'' is found in the Norwegian chronicle '']'' from AD 1230. The chronicler has heard about this phenomenon from compatriots returning from ], and he gives three possible explanations: that the ocean was surrounded by vast fires, that the sun flares could reach around the world to its night side, or that ]s could store energy so that they eventually became ].<ref>http://www.irf.se/norrsken/Norrsken_history.html</ref> | |||
In the case of diffuse auroras, the electron pitch angles are altered by their interaction with various ]. Each interaction is essentially wave-particle ]; the electron energy after interacting with the wave is similar to its energy before interaction, but the direction of motion is altered. If the final direction of motion after scattering is close to the field line (specifically, if it falls within the ]) then the electron will hit the atmosphere. Diffuse auroras are caused by the collective effect of many such scattered electrons hitting the atmosphere. The process is mediated by the plasma waves, which become stronger during periods of high ], leading to increased diffuse aurora at those times. | |||
In ancient Roman mythology, Aurora is the ], renewing herself every morning to fly across the sky, announcing the arrival of the sun. The persona of Aurora the goddess has been incorporated in the writings of ], ] and ]. | |||
In the case of discrete auroras, the trapped electrons are accelerated toward Earth by electric fields that form at an altitude of about 4000–12000 km in the "auroral acceleration region". The electric fields point away from Earth (i.e. upward) along the magnetic field line.<ref>The theory of acceleration by parallel electric fields is reviewed in detail by {{cite journal|vauthors=Lysak R, Echim M, Karlsson T, Marghitu O, Rankin R, Song Y, Watanabe TH|date=2020|title=Quiet, Discrete Auroral Arcs: Acceleration Mechanisms|url=https://link.springer.com/content/pdf/10.1007/s11214-020-00715-5.pdf|journal=Space Science Reviews|volume=216|issue=92|page=92|doi=10.1007/s11214-020-00715-5|bibcode=2020SSRv..216...92L|s2cid=220509575|access-date=1 June 2021|archive-date=12 May 2024|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20240512165316/https://link.springer.com/content/pdf/10.1007/s11214-020-00715-5.pdf|url-status=live}}</ref> Electrons moving downward through these fields gain a substantial amount of energy (on the order of a few ]) in the direction along the magnetic field line toward Earth. This field-aligned acceleration decreases the pitch angle for all of the electrons passing through the region, causing many of them to hit the upper atmosphere. In contrast to the scattering process leading to diffuse auroras, the electric field increases the kinetic energy of all of the electrons transiting downward through the acceleration region by the same amount. This accelerates electrons starting from the magnetosphere with initially low energies (tens of eV or less) to energies required to create an aurora (100s of eV or greater), allowing that large source of particles to contribute to creating auroral light. | |||
==See also== | |||
{{portal|Astronomy|Percival_Lowell-observing_Mars_from_the_Lowell_Observatory.jpg}} | |||
{{br}} | |||
The accelerated electrons carry an electric current along the magnetic field lines (a ]). Since the electric field points in the same direction as the current, there is a net conversion of electromagnetic energy into particle energy in the auroral acceleration region (an ]). The energy to power this load is eventually supplied by the magnetized solar wind flowing around the obstacle of Earth's magnetic field, although exactly how that power flows through the magnetosphere is still an active area of research.<ref>A discussion of 8 theories in use in 2020 as well as several no longer in common use can be found in: {{cite journal|vauthors=Borovsky JE, Birn J, Echim MM, Fujita S, Lysak RL, Knudsen DJ, Marghitu O, Otto A, Watanabe TH, Tanaka T|date=2020|title=Quiescent Discrete Auroral Arcs: A Review of Magnetospheric Generator Mechanisms|url=https://link.springer.com/content/pdf/10.1007%2Fs11214-019-0619-5.pdf|journal=Space Science Reviews|volume=216|issue=92|doi=10.1007/s11214-019-0619-5|s2cid=214002762|access-date=1 June 2021|archive-date=12 May 2024|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20240512165327/https://link.springer.com/content/pdf/10.1007%2Fs11214-019-0619-5.pdf|url-status=live}}</ref> While the energy to power the aurora is ultimately derived from the solar wind, the electrons themselves do not travel directly from the solar wind into Earth's auroral zone; magnetic field lines from these regions do not connect to the solar wind, so there is no direct access for solar wind electrons. | |||
== References == | |||
* | |||
Some auroral features are also created by electrons accelerated by dispersive ]s. At small wavelengths transverse to the background magnetic field (comparable to the ] or ]), Alfvén waves develop a significant electric field parallel to the background magnetic field. This electric field can accelerate electrons to ] energies, significant to produce auroral arcs.<ref>{{cite thesis |type=PhD Thesis |last=Pokhotelov |first=D. |date=2002 |title=Effects of the active auroral ionosphere on magnetosphere-ionosphere coupling. |publisher=Dartmouth College |doi=10.1349/ddlp.3332}}</ref> If the electrons have a speed close to that of the wave's phase velocity, they are accelerated in a manner analogous to a surfer catching an ocean wave.<ref>{{cite web|url=https://now.uiowa.edu/2021/06/physicists-determine-how-auroras-are-created|title=Physicists determine how auroras are created|author=Richard Lewis|website=IOWA university|date=7 June 2021|access-date=8 June 2021|archive-date=8 June 2021|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20210608061856/https://now.uiowa.edu/2021/06/physicists-determine-how-auroras-are-created|url-status=live}}</ref><ref>{{cite journal|vauthors=Schroeder JW, Howes GG, Kletzing CA et al|date=7 June 2021|title=Laboratory measurements of the physics of auroral electron acceleration by Alfvén waves|journal=Nature Communications|volume=12|issue=1|page=3103|doi=10.1038/s41467-021-23377-5|pmid=34099653|pmc=8184961|bibcode=2021NatCo..12.3103S }}</ref> This constantly-changing wave electric field can accelerate electrons along the field line, causing some of them to hit the atmosphere. Electrons accelerated by this mechanism tend to have a broad energy spectrum, in contrast to the sharply-peaked energy spectrum typical of electrons accelerated by quasi-static electric fields. | |||
* - overview of the magnetosphere, including auroras; and including extensive bibliographies of scientific articles | |||
* {{cite book | |||
In addition to the discrete and diffuse electron aurora, proton aurora is caused when magnetospheric protons collide with the upper atmosphere. The proton gains an electron in the interaction, and the resulting neutral hydrogen atom emits photons. The resulting light is too dim to be seen with the naked eye. Other aurora not covered by the above discussion include transpolar arcs (formed poleward of the auroral zone), cusp aurora (formed in two small high-latitude areas on the dayside) and some non-terrestrial auroras. | |||
| first = Robert H. | |||
| last = Eather | |||
== Historically significant events == | |||
| title = Majestic Lights: The Aurora in Science, History, and The Arts | |||
The discovery of a 1770 Japanese ] in 2017 depicting auroras above the ancient Japanese capital of ] suggested that the storm may have been 7% larger than the ], which affected telegraph networks.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.atlasobscura.com/articles/aurora-kyoto-1770-painting-science-magnetic-storm|title=1770 Kyoto Diary|last=Frost|first=Natasha|date=4 October 2017|website=Atlas Obscura|access-date=13 October 2017|archive-date=13 October 2017|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20171013225201/http://www.atlasobscura.com/articles/aurora-kyoto-1770-painting-science-magnetic-storm|url-status=live}}</ref><ref>{{Cite journal|title=Inclined zenith aurora over Kyoto on 17 September 1770: Graphical evidence of extreme magnetic storm|journal=Space Weather|volume=15|issue=10|pages=1314–1320|date=17 September 2017|doi = 10.1002/2017SW001690|last1 = Kataoka|first1 = Ryuho|last2=Iwahashi|first2=Kiyomi|bibcode=2017SpWea..15.1314K|doi-access=free }}</ref> | |||
| publisher = American Geophysical Union | |||
| location = Washington, DC | |||
The auroras that resulted from the Carrington event on both 28 August and 2 September 1859, are thought to be the most spectacular in recent history. In a paper to the ] on 21 November 1861, Balfour Stewart described both auroral events as documented by a self-recording ] at the ] and established the connection between the 2 September 1859 auroral storm and the ]–Hodgson flare event when he observed that "It is not impossible to suppose that in this case our luminary was taken ''in the act''."<ref>{{cite journal|last1=Stewart|first1=Balfour|title=On the Great Magnetic Disturbance of 28 August to 7 September 1859, as Recorded by Photography at the Kew Observatory|journal=Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society of London|date=1861|volume=151|pages=423–430 |url=https://babel.hathitrust.org/cgi/pt?id=pst.000054593107&view=1up&seq=461|doi=10.1098/rstl.1861.0023|doi-access=free|access-date=30 July 2019|archive-date=28 August 2021|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20210828193110/https://babel.hathitrust.org/cgi/pt?id=pst.000054593107&view=1up&seq=461|url-status=live}}</ref> The second auroral event, which occurred on 2 September 1859, was a result of the (unseen) coronal mass ejection associated with the exceptionally intense Carrington–Hodgson white light ] on 1 September 1859. This event produced auroras so widespread and extraordinarily bright that they were seen and reported in published scientific measurements, ship logs, and newspapers throughout the United States, Europe, Japan, and Australia. It was reported by '']'' that in ] on Friday 2 September 1859 the aurora was "so brilliant that at about one o'clock ordinary print could be read by the light".<ref name="green-2006">{{cite journal|doi=10.1016/j.asr.2005.12.021|title=Eyewitness reports of the great auroral storm of 1859|journal=Advances in Space Research|volume=38|issue=2|year=2006|pages=145–154|last1=Green|first1=J|last2=Boardsen|first2=S|last3=Odenwald|first3=S|last4=Humble|first4=J|last5=Pazamickas|first5=K|bibcode=2006AdSpR..38..145G|hdl=2060/20050210157|hdl-access=free }}</ref> One o'clock EST time on Friday 2 September would have been 6:00 GMT; the self-recording magnetograph at the ] was recording the ], which was then one hour old, at its full intensity. Between 1859 and 1862, ] published a series of nine papers on the ] in the '']'' where he collected worldwide reports of the auroral event.<ref name="loomis-1859">See: | |||
| year = 1980 | |||
* {{cite journal|last1=Loomis|first1=Elias|title=The great auroral exhibition of August 28 to September, 1859|journal=The American Journal of Science|date=November 1859|volume=28|pages=385–408|url=https://babel.hathitrust.org/cgi/pt?id=uva.x001679510&view=1up&seq=403|series=2nd series|access-date=30 July 2019|archive-date=13 May 2021|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20210513073306/https://babel.hathitrust.org/cgi/pt?id=uva.x001679510&view=1up&seq=403|url-status=live}} | |||
| isbn = 0-87590-215-4 | |||
* {{cite journal|last1=Loomis|first1=Elias|title=The great auroral exhibition of August 28 to September 4, 1859 – 2nd article|journal=The American Journal of Science|date=January 1860|volume=29|pages=92–97|url=https://babel.hathitrust.org/cgi/pt?id=uva.x001679511&view=1up&seq=112|series=2nd series|access-date=30 July 2019|archive-date=14 May 2021|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20210514192319/https://babel.hathitrust.org/cgi/pt?id=uva.x001679511&view=1up&seq=112|url-status=live}} | |||
}} (323 pages) | |||
* {{cite journal|last1=Loomis|first1=Elias|title=The great auroral exhibition of August 28 to September 4, 1859 – 3rd article|journal=The American Journal of Science|date=February 1860|volume=29|pages=249–266|url=https://babel.hathitrust.org/cgi/pt?id=uva.x001679511&view=1up&seq=269|series=2nd series|access-date=30 July 2019|archive-date=15 May 2021|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20210515012519/https://babel.hathitrust.org/cgi/pt?id=uva.x001679511&view=1up&seq=269|url-status=live}} | |||
* {{cite journal | |||
* {{cite journal|last1=Loomis|first1=Elias|title=The great auroral exhibition of August 28 to September 4, 1859 – 4th article|journal=The American Journal of Science|date=May 1860|volume=29|pages=386–399|url=https://babel.hathitrust.org/cgi/pt?id=uva.x001679511&view=1up&seq=406|series=2nd series|access-date=30 July 2019|archive-date=13 May 2021|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20210513073309/https://babel.hathitrust.org/cgi/pt?id=uva.x001679511&view=1up&seq=406|url-status=live}} | |||
| author = Syun-Ichi Akasofu | |||
* {{cite journal|last1=Loomis|first1=Elias|title=The great auroral exhibition of August 28 to September 4, 1859, and the geographical distribution of auroras and thunder storms – 5th article|journal=The American Journal of Science|date=July 1860|volume=30|pages=79–100|url=https://babel.hathitrust.org/cgi/pt?id=uva.x001679512&view=1up&seq=93|series=2nd series|access-date=30 July 2019|archive-date=14 May 2021|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20210514050130/https://babel.hathitrust.org/cgi/pt?id=uva.x001679512&view=1up&seq=93|url-status=live}} | |||
| title = Secrets of the Aurora Borealis | |||
* {{cite journal|last1=Loomis|first1=Elias|title=The great auroral exhibition of August 28 to September 4, 1859 – 6th article|journal=The American Journal of Science|date=November 1860|volume=30|pages=339–361|url=https://babel.hathitrust.org/cgi/pt?id=uva.x001679512&view=1up&seq=363|series=2nd series|access-date=30 July 2019|archive-date=13 May 2021|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20210513233251/https://babel.hathitrust.org/cgi/pt?id=uva.x001679512&view=1up&seq=363|url-status=live}} | |||
| journal = Alaska Geographic Series | |||
* {{cite journal|last1=Loomis|first1=Elias|title=The great auroral exhibition of August 28 to September 4, 1859 – 7th article|journal=The American Journal of Science|date=July 1861|volume=32|pages=71–84|url=https://babel.hathitrust.org/cgi/pt?id=uva.x001679513&view=1up&seq=85|series=2nd series|access-date=30 July 2019|archive-date=14 May 2021|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20210514003736/https://babel.hathitrust.org/cgi/pt?id=uva.x001679513&view=1up&seq=85|url-status=live}} | |||
| volume = 29 | |||
* {{cite journal|last1=Loomis|first1=Elias|title=On the great auroral exhibition of August 28 to September 4, 1859, and auroras generally – 8th article|journal=The American Journal of Science|date=September 1861|volume=32|pages=318–335|url=https://babel.hathitrust.org/cgi/pt?id=uva.x001679513&view=1up&seq=334|series=2nd series|access-date=30 July 2019|archive-date=14 May 2021|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20210514105930/https://babel.hathitrust.org/cgi/pt?id=uva.x001679513&view=1up&seq=334|url-status=live}} | |||
| issue = 1 | |||
* {{cite journal|last1=Loomis|first1=Elias|title=On electrical currents circulating near the earth's surface and their connection with the phenomena of the aurora polaris – 9th article|journal=The American Journal of Science|date=July 1862|volume=34|pages=34–45|url=https://babel.hathitrust.org/cgi/pt?id=uva.x001679515&view=1up&seq=62|series=2nd series|access-date=30 July 2019|archive-date=14 May 2021|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20210514193441/https://babel.hathitrust.org/cgi/pt?id=uva.x001679515&view=1up&seq=62|url-status=live}}</ref> | |||
| publisher = Graphic Arts Center Publishing Company | |||
| year = 2002 | |||
That aurora is thought to have been produced by one of the most intense ]s in history. It is also notable for the fact that it is the first time where the phenomena of auroral activity and electricity were unambiguously linked. This insight was made possible not only due to scientific ] measurements of the era, but also as a result of a significant portion of the {{convert|125000|mi|km}} of ] lines then in service being significantly disrupted for many hours throughout the storm. Some telegraph lines, however, seem to have been of the appropriate length and orientation to produce a sufficient ] from the ] to allow for continued communication with the telegraph operator power supplies switched off.<ref>{{cite journal|last1=Loomis|first1=Elias|title=The great auroral exhibition of August 28 to September 4, 1859 – 2nd article|journal=The American Journal of Science|date=January 1860|volume=29|pages=92–97|url=https://babel.hathitrust.org/cgi/pt?id=uva.x001679511&view=1up&seq=112|series=2nd series|access-date=30 July 2019|archive-date=14 May 2021|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20210514192319/https://babel.hathitrust.org/cgi/pt?id=uva.x001679511&view=1up&seq=112|url-status=live}}</ref> The following conversation occurred between two operators of the American Telegraph Line between ] and ], on the night of 2 September 1859 and reported in the ''Boston Traveller'': | |||
| month = April | |||
{{Blockquote| | |||
''Boston operator (to Portland operator):'' "Please cut off your battery entirely for fifteen minutes."<br /> | |||
''Portland operator:'' "Will do so. It is now disconnected."<br /> | |||
''Boston:'' "Mine is disconnected, and we are working with the auroral current. How do you receive my writing?"<br /> | |||
''Portland:'' "Better than with our batteries on. – Current comes and goes gradually."<br /> | |||
''Boston:'' "My current is very strong at times, and we can work better without the batteries, as the aurora seems to neutralize and augment our batteries alternately, making current too strong at times for our relay magnets. Suppose we work without batteries while we are affected by this trouble."<br /> | |||
''Portland:'' "Very well. Shall I go ahead with business?"<br /> | |||
''Boston:'' "Yes. Go ahead." | |||
}} | }} | ||
* {{cite book | |||
| first = Candace Sherk | |||
| last = Savage | |||
| title = Aurora: The Mysterious Northern Lights | |||
| location = San Francisco | |||
| publisher = Sierra Club Books / Firefly Books | |||
| year = 1994 / 2001 | |||
| isbn = 0-87156-419-X | |||
}} (144 pages) | |||
* {{cite web | url=http://science.nasa.gov/headlines/y2001/ast26oct_1.htm | title='tis the Season for Auroras | date=] ] | first=Tony | last=Phillips | publisher=NASA | accessdate=2006-05-15}} | |||
The conversation was carried on for around two hours using no ] power at all and working solely with the current induced by the aurora, and it was said that this was the first time on record that more than a word or two was transmitted in such manner.<ref name="green-2006" /> Such events led to the general conclusion that | |||
=== Footnotes === | |||
{{reflist|2}} | |||
{{Blockquote|The effect of the Aurora on the electric telegraph is generally to increase or diminish the electric current generated in working the wires. Sometimes it entirely neutralizes them, so that, in effect, no fluid is discoverable in them. The aurora borealis seems to be composed of a mass of electric matter, resembling in every respect, that generated by the electric galvanic battery. The currents from it change coming on the wires, and then disappear: the mass of the aurora rolls from the horizon to the zenith.<ref>{{cite news |title=Aurora Borealis and the Telegraph |newspaper=The British Colonist |volume=2 |issue=56 |date=19 October 1859 |publisher=Amor De Cosmos |publication-place=Victoria, V.I. |issn=0839-4229 |oclc=1115103262 |page=1, col. 2 |url=https://archive.org/details/dailycolonist18591019uvic/mode/1up |via=Internet Archive}}</ref>}}In May 2024, a ] caused the aurora borealis to be observed from as far south as ], ].<ref>{{Cite web |date=13 May 2024 |title=وقتی طوفان خورشیدی، آسمان ایران و جهان را رنگآمیزی کرد |url=https://www.zoomit.ir/shutter/420985-aurora-borealis-solar-storm/ |access-date=20 July 2024 |website=زومیت |language=fa}}</ref><ref>{{Cite web |title=چطور شد که شفق قطبی در ایران هم دیده شد؟ +عکس |url=https://borna.news/fa/news/2093435/%DA%86%D8%B7%D9%88%D8%B1-%D8%B4%D8%AF-%DA%A9%D9%87-%D8%B4%D9%81%D9%82-%D9%82%D8%B7%D8%A8%DB%8C-%D8%AF%D8%B1-%D8%A7%DB%8C%D8%B1%D8%A7%D9%86-%D9%87%D9%85-%D8%AF%DB%8C%D8%AF%D9%87-%D8%B4%D8%AF-%D8%B9%DA%A9%D8%B3 |access-date=20 July 2024 |website=fa |language=fa}}</ref><ref>{{Cite web |date=12 May 2024 |title=شفق قطبی در آسمان کویر ایران |url=https://www.bbc.com/persian/articles/c72p05277ero |access-date=20 July 2024 |website=BBC News فارسی |language=fa}}</ref> | |||
== Historical views and folklore == | |||
{{More citations needed section|date=May 2024|find=Aurora|find2=Historical views and folklore}} | |||
The earliest datable record of an aurora was recorded in the '']'', a historical chronicle of the history of ancient China, in 977 or 957 BC.<ref>{{Cite web|url= http://www.sci-news.com/space/bamboo-annals-aurora-10703.html|title= Earliest Known Report of Aurora Found in Ancient Chinese Chronicle|date= 12 April 2022|work= SCI News|access-date= 5 June 2022|archive-date= 5 June 2022|archive-url= https://web.archive.org/web/20220605152345/http://www.sci-news.com/space/bamboo-annals-aurora-10703.html|url-status= live}}</ref> | |||
An aurora was described by the ] ] ] in the 4th century BC.<ref>Macleod, ''Explorers: Great Tales of Adventure and Endurance'', p. 21.</ref> ] wrote about auroras in the first book of his '']'', classifying them, for instance, as {{lang|grc-Latn|pithaei}} ('barrel-like'); {{lang|grc-Latn|chasmata}} ('chasm'); {{lang|grc-Latn|pogoniae}} ('bearded'); {{lang|grc-Latn|cyparissae}} ('like ] trees'); and describing their manifold colours. He wrote about whether they were above or below the ], and recalled that under ], an aurora formed above the port city of ] that was so intense and red that a cohort of the army, stationed nearby for fire duty, galloped to the rescue.<ref>Clarke, J. (1910), , pp. 39–41, London: Macmillan, accessed 1 January 2017.</ref> It has been suggested that ] depicted the aurora borealis in his '']'', when he refers to {{lang|grc-Latn|trabes}}, {{lang|grc-Latn|chasma}}, "falling red flames", and "daylight in the night".<ref>Bostock, J. and Riley, H. T. (1855), , Vol. II, London: Bohn, accessed 1 January 2017.</ref> | |||
The earliest depiction of the aurora may have been in ] ] of northern Spain dating to 30,000 BC.<ref>{{cite book |last1=Peratt |first1=Anthony L. |title=Physics of the Plasma Universe |date=2014 |publisher=Springer |location=New York|isbn=978-1-4614-7819-5 |edition=2nd |page=357 |doi=10.1007/978-1-4614-7819-5 |url=https://doi.org/10.1007/978-1-4614-7819-5 |url-access=subscription |language=en |access-date=18 March 2024 |archive-date=12 May 2024 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20240512201045/https://link.springer.com/book/10.1007/978-1-4614-7819-5 |url-status=live }}</ref> | |||
The oldest known written record of the aurora was in a Chinese legend written around 2600 BC. On an autumn around 2000 BC,<ref>{{Cite web|last=Administrator|first=NASA|date=7 June 2013|title=The History of Auroras|url=http://www.nasa.gov/mission_pages/themis/auroras/aurora_history.html|access-date=22 May 2022|website=NASA|language=en|archive-date=29 March 2023|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20230329082101/https://www.nasa.gov/mission_pages/themis/auroras/aurora_history.html|url-status=dead}}</ref> according to a legend, a young woman named Fubao was sitting alone in the wilderness by a bay, when suddenly a "magical band of light" appeared like "moving clouds and flowing water", turning into a bright ] around the ], which cascaded a pale silver brilliance, illuminating the earth and making shapes and shadows seem alive. Moved by this sight, Fubao became pregnant and gave birth to a son, the Emperor ], known legendarily as the initiator of ] and the ancestor of all Chinese people.{{citation needed|date=June 2021}} In the {{lang|zh-Latn|]}}, a creature named {{lang|zh-Latn|Shilong}} is described to be like a red dragon shining in the night sky with a body a thousand miles long. In ancient times, the Chinese did not have a fixed word for the aurora, so it was named according to the different shapes of the aurora, such as "Sky Dog" ({{lang|zh|天狗}}), "Sword/Knife Star" ({{lang|zh|刀星}}), "Chiyou banner" ({{lang|zh|蚩尤旗}}), "Sky's Open Eyes" ({{lang|zh|天开眼}}), and "Stars like Rain" ({{lang|zh|星陨如雨}}).{{citation needed|date=June 2021}} | |||
In ], ] were considered messengers from heaven. However, researchers from Japan's Graduate University for Advanced Studies and National Institute of Polar Research claimed in March 2020 that red pheasant tails witnessed across the night sky over Japan in 620 A.D., might be a red aurora produced during a magnetic storm.<ref>{{cite web|url=https://phys.org/news/2020-03-modern-science-reveals-ancient-secret.html|title=Modern science reveals ancient secret in Japanese literature|website=phys.org|date=30 March 2020|access-date=3 April 2020|archive-date=1 April 2020|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20200401084459/https://phys.org/news/2020-03-modern-science-reveals-ancient-secret.html|url-status=live}}</ref> | |||
] | |||
In the traditions of ], the Aurora Australis is commonly associated with fire. For example, the ] of western ] called auroras {{lang|la|puae buae}} ('ashes'), while the ] of eastern Victoria perceived auroras as ] in the spirit world. The ] people of ] say that an auroral display is {{lang|dif|kootchee}}, an evil spirit creating a large fire. Similarly, the ] people of South Australia refer to auroras seen over ] as the campfires of spirits in the 'Land of the Dead'. Aboriginal people{{which|date=January 2023}} in southwest ] believe the auroras to be the fires of the ''Oola Pikka'', ghostly spirits who spoke to the people through auroras. Sacred law forbade anyone except male elders from watching or interpreting the messages of ancestors they believed were transmitted through an aurora.<ref>{{cite journal|last=Hamacher|first=D. W.|title=Aurorae in Australian Aboriginal Traditions|journal=Journal of Astronomical History and Heritage|year=2013|volume=16|issue=2|pages=207–219|doi=10.3724/SP.J.1440-2807.2013.02.05 |url=http://www.narit.or.th/en/files/2013JAHHvol16/2013JAHH...16..207H.pdf|arxiv=1309.3367|bibcode=2013JAHH...16..207H|s2cid=118102443 |access-date=19 October 2013|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20131020181951/http://www.narit.or.th/en/files/2013JAHHvol16/2013JAHH...16..207H.pdf|archive-date=20 October 2013|url-status=dead }}</ref> | |||
Among the ] of ], aurora australis or {{lang|mi|Tahunui-a-rangi}} ("great torches in the sky")<!-- based on https://maoridictionary.co.nz/search?idiom=&phrase=&proverb=&loan=&histLoanWords=&keywords=tahu https://maoridictionary.co.nz/search?idiom=&phrase=&proverb=&loan=&histLoanWords=&keywords=nui https://maoridictionary.co.nz/search?idiom=&phrase=&proverb=&loan=&histLoanWords=&keywords=rangi --> were lit by ancestors who sailed south to a "land of ice" (or their descendants);<ref name="steel-2018">{{Cite book|last1=Steel|first1=Frances|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=wluwDwAAQBAJ&pg=PA46|title=New Zealand and the Sea: Historical Perspectives|last2=Anderson|first2=Atholl|author2-link=Atholl Anderson|last3=Ballantyne|first3=Tony|last4=Benjamin|first4=Julie|last5=Booth|first5=Douglas|last6=Brickell|first6=Chris|last7=Gilderdale|first7=Peter|last8=Haines|first8=David|last9=Liebich|first9=Susan|date=2018|publisher=Bridget Williams Books|isbn=978-0-947518-71-4|page=46|language=en|access-date=1 June 2022|archive-date=18 April 2024|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20240418135330/https://books.google.com/books?id=wluwDwAAQBAJ&pg=PA46#v=onepage&q&f=false|url-status=live}}</ref><ref>{{Cite book|last=Best|first=Elsdon|url=http://nzetc.victoria.ac.nz/tm/scholarly/tei-BesAstro-t1-body-d1-d9.html|title=The Astronomical Knowledge of the Maori, Genuine and Empirical|publisher=Dominion Museum|year=1922|location=Wellington|page=58|via=Victoria University of Wellington|access-date=13 September 2021|archive-date=13 September 2021|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20210913001358/http://nzetc.victoria.ac.nz/tm/scholarly/tei-BesAstro-t1-body-d1-d9.html|url-status=live}}</ref> these people were said to be ]'s expedition party who had reached the ].<ref name="steel-2018" /> around the 7th century.<ref>{{cite journal|last1=Wehi|first1=Priscilla M.|author-link1=Priscilla Wehi|last2=Scott|first2=Nigel J.|last3=Beckwith|first3=Jacinta|last4=Pryor Rodgers|first4=Rata|last5=Gillies|first5=Tasman|last6=Van Uitregt|first6=Vincent|last7=Krushil|first7=Watene|year=2021|title=A short scan of Māori journeys to Antarctica|journal=Journal of the Royal Society of New Zealand|volume=52|issue=5 |pages=587–598|doi=10.1080/03036758.2021.1917633|doi-access=free|pmid=39440197 |pmc=11485871}}</ref> | |||
]]] | |||
In Scandinavia, the first mention of {{lang|non|norðrljós}} (the northern lights) is found in the Norwegian chronicle {{lang|non|]}} from AD 1230. The chronicler has heard about this phenomenon from compatriots returning from ], and he gives three possible explanations: that the ocean was surrounded by vast fires; that the sun flares could reach around the world to its night side; or that ]s could store energy so that they eventually became ].<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.irf.se/norrsken/Norrsken_history.html|title=Norrsken history|publisher=Irf.se|date=12 November 2003|access-date=26 July 2011|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110721215920/http://www.irf.se/norrsken/Norrsken_history.html|archive-date=21 July 2011|url-status=dead}}</ref> | |||
Walter William Bryant wrote in his book ] (1920) that ] "seems to have been something of a ], for he recommends ] to cure infectious diseases 'brought on by the sulfurous vapours of the Aurora Borealis{{'"}}.<ref>Walter William Bryant, {{Ws| ]}} Macmillan Co. (1920) {{Ws| ]}}</ref> | |||
In 1778, ] theorized in his paper ''Aurora Borealis, Suppositions and Conjectures towards forming an Hypothesis for its Explanation'' that an aurora was caused by a concentration of electrical charge in the polar regions intensified by the snow and moisture in the air:<ref>The original English text of Benjamin Franklin's article on the cause of auroras is available at: {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20190731005858/https://founders.archives.gov/documents/Franklin/01-28-02-0150 |date=31 July 2019 }}</ref><ref>A translation into French of Franklin's article was read to the French Royal Academy of Sciences and an excerpt of it was published in: {{cite journal|last1=Francklin|title=Extrait des suppositions et des conjectures sur la cause des Aurores Boréales|journal=Journal de Physique|date=June 1779|volume=13|pages=409–412|url=https://babel.hathitrust.org/cgi/pt?id=mdp.39015077781162&view=1up&seq=439|trans-title=Extract of Suppositions and conjectures on the cause of auroras borealis|language=fr|access-date=31 July 2019|archive-date=27 April 2021|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20210427100326/https://babel.hathitrust.org/cgi/pt?id=mdp.39015077781162&view=1up&seq=439|url-status=live}}</ref><ref>{{cite book|editor=Goodman, N.|title=The Ingenious Dr. Franklin: Selected Scientific Letters of Benjamin Franklin|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=Wojw-wmYrNwC&pg=PA3|year=2011|publisher=University of Pennsylvania Press|location=Philadelphia|isbn=978-0-8122-0561-9|page=3}}</ref> | |||
{{blockquote|text=May not then the great quantity of electricity brought into the polar regions by the clouds, which are condens'd there, and fall in snow, which electricity would enter the earth, but cannot penetrate the ice; may it not, I say (as a bottle overcharged) break thro' that low atmosphere and run along in the vacuum over the air towards the equator, diverging as the degrees of longitude enlarge, strongly visible where densest, and becoming less visible as it more diverges; till it finds a passage to the earth in more temperate climates, or is mingled with the upper air?|author=|source=}} | |||
Observations of the rhythmic movement of compass needles due to the influence of an aurora were confirmed in the Swedish city of ] by ] and ]. In 1741, Hiorter was able to link large magnetic fluctuation to the observation of an aurora overhead. This evidence helped to support their theory that 'magnetic storms' are responsible for such compass fluctuations.<ref>J. Oschman (2016), ''Energy Medicine: The Scientific Basis'' (Elsevier, Edinburgh), p. 275.</ref> | |||
]'s 1865 painting '']'']] | |||
A variety of ] myths surround the spectacle. The European explorer ] travelled with ] Dene in 1771 and recorded their views on the {{lang|chp|ed-thin}} ('caribou'). According to Hearne, the Dene people saw the resemblance between an aurora and the sparks produced when ] fur is stroked. They believed that the lights were the spirits of their departed friends dancing in the sky, and when they shone brightly it meant that their deceased friends were very happy.<ref>Hearne, Samuel (1958). ''A Journey to the Northern Ocean: A journey from Prince of Wales' Fort in Hudson's Bay to the Northern Ocean in the years 1769, 1770, 1771, 1772''. Richard Glover (ed.). Toronto: The MacMillan Company of Canada. pp. 221–222.</ref> | |||
During the night after the ], an aurora was seen from the battlefield. The ] took this as a sign that God was on their side, as the lights were rarely seen so far south. The painting '']'' by ] is widely interpreted to represent the conflict of the ].<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://americanart.si.edu/artwork/aurora-borealis-4806|title=Aurora Borealis | Smithsonian American Art Museum|website=americanart.si.edu|access-date=18 April 2024|archive-date=27 February 2024|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20240227070127/https://americanart.si.edu/artwork/aurora-borealis-4806|url-status=live}}</ref> | |||
A mid 19th-century British source says auroras were a rare occurrence before the 18th century.<ref>''The National Cyclopaedia of Useful Knowledge, Vol. II'' (1847), London: Charles Knight, p. 496</ref> It quotes ] as saying that before the aurora of 1716, no such phenomenon had been recorded for more than 80 years, and none of any consequence since 1574. It says no appearance is recorded in the ] between 1666 and 1716; and that one aurora recorded in ''Berlin Miscellany'' for 1797 was called a very rare event. One observed in 1723 at ] was stated to be the first ever seen there. ] (1733) states the oldest residents of ] thought the phenomenon a great rarity before 1716. The period between approximately 1645 and 1715 corresponds to the ] in sunspot activity. | |||
In ]'s satirical poem "]" (1908), a Yukon prospector discovers that the aurora is the glow from a ] mine. He stakes his claim, then goes to town looking for investors. | |||
In the early 1900s, the Norwegian scientist ] laid the foundation{{Colloquialism|date=June 2021}} for the current understanding of geomagnetism and polar auroras. | |||
In ] mythology, the northern lights are caused by the deceased who bled to death cutting themselves, their blood spilling on the sky. Many aboriginal peoples of northern Eurasia and North America share similar beliefs of northern lights being the blood of the deceased, some believing they are caused by dead warriors' blood spraying on the sky as they engage in playing games, riding horses or having fun in some other way.{{citation needed|date=January 2023}} | |||
== Extraterrestrial aurorae == | |||
{{See also|Magnetosphere of Jupiter#Aurorae}} | |||
] aurora; the far left bright spot connects magnetically to ]; the spots at the bottom of the image lead to ] and ].]] | |||
]. | |||
] shows images from 81 hours of observations of Saturn's aurora.]] | |||
Both ] and ] have magnetic fields that are stronger than Earth's (Jupiter's equatorial field strength is 4.3 ], compared to 0.3 gauss for Earth), and both have extensive radiation belts. Auroras have been observed on both gas planets, most clearly using the ], and the ] and ] spacecraft, as well as on ] and ].<ref name="european space agency-2004">{{cite web|url=http://www.esa.int/esaCP/SEMLQ71DU8E_index_0.html|title=ESA Portal – Mars Express discovers auroras on Mars|publisher=European Space Agency|date=11 August 2004|access-date=5 August 2010|archive-date=19 October 2012|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20121019183824/http://www.esa.int/esaCP/SEMLQ71DU8E_index_0.html|url-status=live}}</ref> | |||
The aurorae on Saturn seem, like Earth's, to be powered by the solar wind. However, Jupiter's aurorae are more complex. Jupiter's main auroral oval is associated with the plasma produced by the volcanic moon ], and the transport of this plasma within the planet's ]. An uncertain fraction of Jupiter's aurorae are powered by the solar wind. In addition, the moons, especially Io, are also powerful sources of aurora. These arise from electric currents along field lines ("field aligned currents"), generated by a dynamo mechanism due to the relative motion between the rotating planet and the moving moon. Io, which has active ] and an ionosphere, is a particularly strong source, and its currents also generate radio emissions, which have been studied since 1955. Using the Hubble Space Telescope, auroras over Io, Europa and Ganymede have all been observed. | |||
Auroras have also been observed on ] and ]. Venus has no magnetic field and so Venusian auroras appear as bright and diffuse patches of varying shape and intensity, sometimes distributed over the full disc of the planet.<ref>{{Cite journal|last1=Phillips|first1=J. L.|last2=Stewart|first2=A. I. F.|last3=Luhmann|first3=J. G.|date=1986|title=The Venus ultraviolet aurora: Observations at 130.4 nm|url=https://agupubs.onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/abs/10.1029/GL013i010p01047|journal=Geophysical Research Letters|language=en|volume=13|issue=10|pages=1047–1050|doi=10.1029/GL013i010p01047|bibcode=1986GeoRL..13.1047P|issn=1944-8007|access-date=17 January 2021|archive-date=22 January 2021|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20210122212248/https://agupubs.onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/abs/10.1029/GL013i010p01047|url-status=live}}</ref> A Venusian aurora originates when electrons from the solar wind collide with the night-side atmosphere. | |||
An aurora was detected on Mars, on 14 August 2004, by the SPICAM instrument aboard '']''. The aurora was located at ], in the region of 177° east, 52° south. The total size of the emission region was about 30 km across, and possibly about 8 km high. By analysing a map of crustal magnetic anomalies compiled with data from ], scientists observed that the region of the emissions corresponded to an area where the strongest magnetic field is localized. This correlation indicated that the origin of the light emission was a flux of electrons moving along the crust magnetic lines and exciting the upper atmosphere of Mars.<ref name="european space agency-2004" /><ref>{{cite news|date=18 February 2006|url=http://www.universetoday.com/am/publish/mars_express_aurorae.html?1722006|title=Mars Express Finds Auroras on Mars|work=Universe Today|access-date=5 August 2010|archive-date=10 February 2007|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20070210031424/http://www.universetoday.com/am/publish/mars_express_aurorae.html?1722006|url-status=live}}</ref> | |||
Between 2014 and 2016, cometary auroras were observed on comet ] by multiple instruments on the ] spacecraft.<ref>{{cite web|date=21 September 2020|title=Comet Chury's ultraviolet aurora|url=https://www.unibe.ch/news/media_news/media_relations_e/media_releases/2020/media_releases_2020/comet_chury_s_ultraviolet_aurora/index_eng.html|access-date=17 January 2021|website=Portal|archive-date=16 January 2021|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20210116034054/https://www.unibe.ch/news/media_news/media_relations_e/media_releases/2020/media_releases_2020/comet_chury_s_ultraviolet_aurora/index_eng.html|url-status=live}}</ref><ref name="galand-2020">{{Cite journal|last1=Galand|first1=M.|last2=Feldman|first2=P. D.|last3=Bockelée-Morvan|first3=D.|author3-link=Dominique Bockelée-Morvan|last4=Biver|first4=N.|last5=Cheng|first5=Y.-C.|last6=Rinaldi|first6=G.|last7=Rubin|first7=M.|last8=Altwegg|first8=K.|author8-link=Kathrin Altwegg|last9=Deca|first9=J.|last10=Beth|first10=A.|last11=Stephenson|first11=P.|date=21 September 2020|title=Far-ultraviolet aurora identified at comet 67P/Churyumov-Gerasimenko|url=https://www.nature.com/articles/s41550-020-1171-7.epdf?sharing_token=D757kcyUX_56njDTcvpSzdRgN0jAjWel9jnR3ZoTv0ODS5LjlN2IKlQgz2jQGPEcFej9C7svyQPjp54CQ50dBx_tkOS3bq-oMWB16Ux3zdWmIZbNCQBAGA1gFAIyXN43TupVPuTwe_oI8bjAahWq18wR7m9QXx7Yhz7zESpivB3btrTi5Qt3trSYVr1aO5yYHu6Hfcnq6u_UVzU3rpWFxvMwCy3aj-2263pTY4ThIYuLO3VW51M44nPr7Ff1Y5vP5tsgJekLXnza9PmvSWJF1Q==&tracking_referrer=www.space.com|journal=Nature Astronomy|language=en|volume=4|issue=11|pages=1084–1091|doi=10.1038/s41550-020-1171-7|bibcode=2020NatAs...4.1084G|issn=2397-3366|hdl=10044/1/82183|s2cid=221884342|hdl-access=free|access-date=17 January 2021|archive-date=9 April 2022|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20220409035009/https://www.nature.com/articles/s41550-020-1171-7.epdf?sharing_token=D757kcyUX_56njDTcvpSzdRgN0jAjWel9jnR3ZoTv0ODS5LjlN2IKlQgz2jQGPEcFej9C7svyQPjp54CQ50dBx_tkOS3bq-oMWB16Ux3zdWmIZbNCQBAGA1gFAIyXN43TupVPuTwe_oI8bjAahWq18wR7m9QXx7Yhz7zESpivB3btrTi5Qt3trSYVr1aO5yYHu6Hfcnq6u_UVzU3rpWFxvMwCy3aj-2263pTY4ThIYuLO3VW51M44nPr7Ff1Y5vP5tsgJekLXnza9PmvSWJF1Q==&tracking_referrer=www.space.com|url-status=live}}</ref> The auroras were observed at ] wavelengths. ] observations revealed atomic emissions of hydrogen and oxygen caused by the ] (not ], like in terrestrial auroras) of water molecules in the comet's coma.<ref name="galand-2020" /> The interaction of accelerated electrons from the solar wind with gas particles in the coma is responsible for the aurora.<ref name="galand-2020" /> Since comet 67P has no magnetic field, the aurora is diffusely spread around the comet.<ref name="galand-2020" /> | |||
]s, such as ]s, have been suggested to experience ionization in their upper atmospheres and generate an aurora modified by ] in their turbulent ]s.<ref>{{Cite journal|last1=Helling|first1=Christiane|last2=Rimmer|first2=Paul B.|date=23 September 2019|title=Lightning and charge processes in brown dwarf and exoplanet atmospheres|url=|journal=Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society A: Mathematical, Physical and Engineering Sciences|volume=377|issue=2154|page=20180398|doi=10.1098/rsta.2018.0398|arxiv=1903.04565|pmid=31378171|pmc=6710897|bibcode=2019RSPTA.37780398H}}</ref> However, there is no current detection of an exoplanet aurora. | |||
The first ever ] auroras were discovered in July 2015 over the ] star ].<ref>{{cite web|url=http://news.discovery.com/space/alien-life-exoplanets/monstrous-aurora-detected-beyond-our-solar-system-150729.htm|title=Monstrous Aurora Detected Beyond our Solar System|last1=O'Neill|first1=Ian|date=29 July 2015|publisher=Discovery|access-date=29 July 2015|archive-date=31 July 2015|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20150731022645/http://news.discovery.com/space/alien-life-exoplanets/monstrous-aurora-detected-beyond-our-solar-system-150729.htm|url-status=dead}}</ref> The mainly red aurora was found to be a million times brighter than the northern lights, a result of the charged particles interacting with hydrogen in the atmosphere. It has been speculated that stellar winds may be stripping off material from the surface of the brown dwarf to produce their own electrons. Another possible explanation for the auroras is that an as-yet-undetected body around the dwarf star is throwing off material, as is the case with Jupiter and its moon Io.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.space.com/30087-alien-auroras-found-beyond-solar-system.html|title=First Alien Auroras Found, Are 1 Million Times Brighter Than Any on Earth|last1=Q. Choi|first1=Charles|date=29 July 2015|publisher=space.com|access-date=29 July 2015|archive-date=30 July 2015|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20150730212125/http://www.space.com/30087-alien-auroras-found-beyond-solar-system.html|url-status=live}}</ref> | |||
== See also == | |||
* ] | |||
* ] | |||
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* ] | |||
== Explanatory notes == | |||
{{notelist}} | |||
== References == | |||
{{reflist}} | |||
== Further reading == | |||
* {{cite EB9 |wstitle= Aurora Polaris |volume= III |last= Procter |first= Henry Richardson |pages= 90-99 |short=1}} | |||
* {{Cite EB1911|wstitle=Aurora Polaris|volume=2|last= Chree|first= Charles |author-link= Charles Chree|pages=927–934|short=1}} These two both include detailed descriptions of historical observations and descriptions. | |||
* {{cite journal|first=David P.|last=Stern|title=A Brief History of Magnetospheric Physics During the Space Age|journal=Reviews of Geophysics|volume=34|issue=1|date=1996|pages=1–31|doi=10.1029/95rg03508|bibcode=1996RvGeo..34....1S|url=https://zenodo.org/record/1231372 }} | |||
* {{cite web|last1=Stern|first1=David P.|last2=Peredo|first2=Mauricio|title=The Exploration of the Earth's Magnetosphere|website=phy6.org|url=http://www.phy6.org/Education/Intro.html }} | |||
* {{cite book|first=Robert H.|last=Eather|title=Majestic Lights: The Aurora in Science, History, and The Arts|publisher=American Geophysical Union|location=Washington, DC|isbn=978-0-87590-215-9|date=1980 }} | |||
* {{cite journal|last=Akasofu|first=Syun-Ichi|title=Secrets of the Aurora Borealis|journal=Alaska Geographic Series|volume=29|issue=1|date=April 2002 }} | |||
* {{Cite journal|last1=Daglis|first1=Ioannis|title=Aurora – The magnificent northern lights|journal=Recorder|volume=29|issue=9|pages=45–48|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20200614024652/http://proteus.space.noa.gr/~daglis/images/pdf_files/other_pubs/recorder.pdf|archive-date=14 June 2020|last2=Akasofu|first2=Syun-Ichi|date=November 2004|url=http://proteus.space.noa.gr/~daglis/images/pdf_files/other_pubs/recorder.pdf}} | |||
* {{cite book|first=Candace Sherk|last=Savage|title=Aurora: The Mysterious Northern Lights|location=San Francisco|publisher=] / Firefly Books|date=1994|isbn=978-0-87156-419-1|url-access=registration|url=https://archive.org/details/aurora00cand }} | |||
* {{cite book|first=Bengt|last=Hultqvist|title=Handbook of the Solar-Terrestrial Environment|chapter=The Aurora|location=Berlin Heidelberg|publisher=Springer-Verlag|date=2007|editor-last=Kamide|editor-first=Y.|editor2-last=Chian|editor2-first=A|isbn=978-3-540-46314-6|doi=10.1007/978-3-540-46315-3_13|pages=331–354 }} | |||
* {{cite book|last1=Sandholt|first1=Even|last2=Carlson|first2=Herbert C.|last3=Egeland|first3=Alv|title=Dayside and Polar Cap Aurora|chapter=Optical Aurora|location=Netherlands|publisher=Springer Netherlands|date=2002|isbn=978-0-306-47969-4|doi=10.1007/0-306-47969-9_3|pages=33–51 }} | |||
* {{cite web|url=https://science.nasa.gov/headlines/y2001/ast26oct_1.htm|title='tis the Season for Auroras|date=21 October 2001|first=Tony|last=Phillips|publisher=NASA|access-date=15 May 2006|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20060411100954/https://science.nasa.gov/headlines/y2001/ast26oct_1.htm|archive-date=11 April 2006|url-status=dead}} | |||
* {{cite book |title=The Aurora Watcher's Handbook |first=Neil |last=Davis |publisher=University of Alaska Press |date=1992 |isbn=0-912006-60-9 }} | |||
== External links == | == External links == | ||
{{external links cleanup|date=November 2024}} | |||
{{commons|Aurora}} | |||
{{Commons}} | |||
* | |||
{{Wikiquote|Aurora}} | |||
* - Study of sounds & acoustical effects related to Aurora Borealis | |||
{{Wikivoyage|Northern Lights}} | |||
* | |||
{{Wikisource|Aurora}} | |||
* | |||
* | |||
* | |||
* (archived 24 November 2016) | |||
* | |||
* | |||
* – Online Converter – ''Northern Lights'' Latitude | |||
* – Aurora forecasts for Europe (archived 11 March 2019) | |||
* | |||
* – The Northwest Territories is the world's Northern Lights mecca. | |||
=== Multimedia === | |||
{{Magnetospherics}} | |||
* – Shot in Iceland over the winter of 2013/2014 | |||
* – Taken in Norway in 2011 | |||
* – Views taken 2009–2011 (archived 4 October 2011) | |||
* – "Full-Sky Aurora" over Eastern ]. December 2011 | |||
* (archived 2 September 2010) | |||
* – Aurora Borealis – How The ''Northern Lights'' Are Created (video on ]) | |||
* – ''Northern Lights'' – Documentary | |||
* – Northern lights video in real time | |||
* – ''Northern Light – Story of ]'' (] Island – 6/7 April 2000) (archived 17 August 2011) | |||
* (time-lapse) − Auroras – Ground-Level View from ] 2011 (video on ]) | |||
* (time-lapse) − Auroras – Ground-Level View from ], ], 24 November 2010 (video on ]) | |||
* (time-lapse) – ] and Auroras – Viewed from the ] (video on ]) | |||
{{Magnetospherics|state=collapsed}} | |||
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Latest revision as of 20:42, 5 January 2025
Atmospheric effect caused by the solar windSeveral terms redirect here. For other uses, see Aurora (disambiguation), Aurora Borealis (disambiguation), Aurora Australis (disambiguation), Northern Lights (disambiguation), and Southern Lights (disambiguation).
Images of auroras from across the world, including those with rarer red and blue lights
An aurora (pl. aurorae or auroras), also commonly known as the northern lights (aurora borealis) or southern lights (aurora australis), is a natural light display in Earth's sky, predominantly seen in high-latitude regions (around the Arctic and Antarctic). Auroras display dynamic patterns of brilliant lights that appear as curtains, rays, spirals, or dynamic flickers covering the entire sky.
Auroras are the result of disturbances in the Earth's magnetosphere caused by the solar wind. Major disturbances result from enhancements in the speed of the solar wind from coronal holes and coronal mass ejections. These disturbances alter the trajectories of charged particles in the magnetospheric plasma. These particles, mainly electrons and protons, precipitate into the upper atmosphere (thermosphere/exosphere). The resulting ionization and excitation of atmospheric constituents emit light of varying colour and complexity. The form of the aurora, occurring within bands around both polar regions, is also dependent on the amount of acceleration imparted to the precipitating particles.
Planets in the Solar System, brown dwarfs, comets, and some natural satellites also host auroras.
Etymology
The term aurora borealis was coined by Galileo Galilei in 1619, from the Roman Aurora, goddess of the dawn, and the Greek Boreas, god of the cold north wind.
The word aurora is derived from the name of the Roman goddess of the dawn, Aurora, who travelled from east to west announcing the coming of the Sun. Aurora was first used in English in the 14th century. The words borealis and australis are derived from the names of the ancient gods of the north wind (Boreas) and the south wind (Auster or australis) in Greco-Roman mythology.
Aurora borealis was first used to describe the northern lights by the French philosopher, Pierre Gassendi (also called Petrus Gassendus) in 1621, then entered English in 1828.
Occurrence
Auroras are most commonly observed in the "auroral zone", a band approximately 6° (~660 km) wide in latitude centered on 67° north and south. The region that currently displays an aurora is called the "auroral oval". The oval is displaced by the solar wind, pushing it about 15° away from the geomagnetic pole (not the geographic pole) in the noon direction and 23° away in the midnight direction. The peak equatorward extent of the oval is displaced slightly from geographic midnight. It is centered about 3–5° nightward of the magnetic pole, so that auroral arcs reach furthest toward the equator when the magnetic pole in question is in between the observer and the Sun, which is called magnetic midnight.
Early evidence for a geomagnetic connection comes from the statistics of auroral observations. Elias Loomis (1860), and later Hermann Fritz (1881) and Sophus Tromholt (1881) in more detail, established that the aurora appeared mainly in the auroral zone.
In northern latitudes, the effect is known as the aurora borealis or the northern lights. The southern counterpart, the aurora australis or the southern lights, has features almost identical to the aurora borealis and changes simultaneously with changes in the northern auroral zone. The aurora australis is visible from high southern latitudes in Antarctica, the Southern Cone, South Africa, Australasia, the Falkland Islands, and under exceptional circumstances as far north as Uruguay. The aurora borealis is visible from areas around the Arctic such as Alaska, Canada, Iceland, Greenland, the Faroe Islands, Scandinavia, Finland, Scotland, and Russia. A geomagnetic storm causes the auroral ovals (north and south) to expand, bringing the aurora to lower latitudes. On rare occasions, the aurora borealis can be seen as far south as the Mediterranean and the southern states of the US while the aurora australis can be seen as far north as New Caledonia and the Pilbara region in Western Australia. During the Carrington Event, the greatest geomagnetic storm ever observed, auroras were seen even in the tropics.
Auroras seen within the auroral oval may be directly overhead. From farther away, they illuminate the poleward horizon as a greenish glow, or sometimes a faint red, as if the Sun were rising from an unusual direction. Auroras also occur poleward of the auroral zone as either diffuse patches or arcs, which can be subvisual.
Videos of the aurora australis taken by the crew of Expedition 28 on board the International Space StationThis sequence of shots was taken 17 September 2011 from 17:22:27 to 17:45:12 GMT, on an ascending pass from south of Madagascar to just north of Australia over the Indian Ocean.This sequence of shots was taken 7 September 2011 from 17:38:03 to 17:49:15 GMT, from the French Southern and Antarctic Lands in the South Indian Ocean to southern Australia.This sequence of shots was taken 11 September 2011 from 13:45:06 to 14:01:51 GMT, from a descending pass near eastern Australia, rounding about to an ascending pass to the east of New Zealand. NOAA maps of North America and EurasiaNorth AmericaEurasiaThese maps show the local midnight equatorward boundary of the aurora at different levels of geomagnetic activity as of 28 October 2011 – these maps change as the location of the geomagnetic poles change. A K-index of Kp= 3 corresponds to relatively low levels of geomagnetic activity, while Kp= 9 represents high levels.Auroras are occasionally seen in latitudes below the auroral zone, when a geomagnetic storm temporarily enlarges the auroral oval. Large geomagnetic storms are most common during the peak of the 11-year sunspot cycle or during the three years after the peak. An electron spirals (gyrates) about a field line at an angle that is determined by its velocity vectors, parallel and perpendicular, respectively, to the local geomagnetic field vector B. This angle is known as the "pitch angle" of the particle. The distance, or radius, of the electron from the field line at any time is known as its Larmor radius. The pitch angle increases as the electron travels to a region of greater field strength nearer to the atmosphere. Thus, it is possible for some particles to return, or mirror, if the angle becomes 90° before entering the atmosphere to collide with the denser molecules there. Other particles that do not mirror enter the atmosphere and contribute to the auroral display over a range of altitudes. Other types of auroras have been observed from space; for example, "poleward arcs" stretching sunward across the polar cap, the related "theta aurora", and "dayside arcs" near noon. These are relatively infrequent and poorly understood. Other interesting effects occur such as pulsating aurora, "black aurora" and their rarer companion "anti-black aurora" and subvisual red arcs. In addition to all these, a weak glow (often deep red) observed around the two polar cusps, the field lines separating the ones that close through Earth from those that are swept into the tail and close remotely.
Images
Early work on the imaging of the auroras was done in 1949 by the University of Saskatchewan using the SCR-270 radar. The altitudes where auroral emissions occur were revealed by Carl Størmer and his colleagues, who used cameras to triangulate more than 12,000 auroras. They discovered that most of the light is produced between 90 and 150 km (56 and 93 mi) above the ground, while extending at times to more than 1,000 km (620 mi).
Forms
According to Clark (2007), there are five main forms that can be seen from the ground, from least to most visible:
- A mild glow, near the horizon. These can be close to the limit of visibility, but can be distinguished from moonlit clouds because stars can be seen undiminished through the glow.
- Patches or surfaces that look like clouds.
- Arcs curve across the sky.
- Rays are light and dark stripes across arcs, reaching upwards by various amounts.
- Coronas cover much of the sky and diverge from one point on it.
Brekke (1994) also described some auroras as "curtains". The similarity to curtains is often enhanced by folds within the arcs. Arcs can fragment or break up into separate, at times rapidly changing, often rayed features that may fill the whole sky. These are also known as discrete auroras, which are at times bright enough to read a newspaper by at night.
These forms are consistent with auroras being shaped by Earth's magnetic field. The appearances of arcs, rays, curtains, and coronas are determined by the shapes of the luminous parts of the atmosphere and a viewer's position.
Colours and wavelengths of auroral light
- Red: At its highest altitudes, excited atomic oxygen emits at 630 nm (red); low concentration of atoms and lower sensitivity of eyes at this wavelength make this colour visible only under more intense solar activity. The low number of oxygen atoms and their gradually diminishing concentration is responsible for the faint appearance of the top parts of the "curtains". Scarlet, crimson, and carmine are the most often-seen hues of red for the auroras.
- Green: At lower altitudes, the more frequent collisions suppress the 630 nm (red) mode: rather the 557.7 nm emission (green) dominates. A fairly high concentration of atomic oxygen and higher eye sensitivity in green make green auroras the most common. The excited molecular nitrogen (atomic nitrogen being rare due to the high stability of the N2 molecule) plays a role here, as it can transfer energy by collision to an oxygen atom, which then radiates it away at the green wavelength. (Red and green can also mix together to produce pink or yellow hues.) The rapid decrease of concentration of atomic oxygen below about 100 km is responsible for the abrupt-looking end of the lower edges of the curtains. Both the 557.7 and 630.0 nm wavelengths correspond to forbidden transitions of atomic oxygen, a slow mechanism responsible for the graduality (0.7 s and 107 s respectively) of flaring and fading.
- Blue: At yet lower altitudes, atomic oxygen is uncommon, and molecular nitrogen and ionized molecular nitrogen take over in producing visible light emission, radiating at a large number of wavelengths in both red and blue parts of the spectrum, with 428 nm (blue) being dominant. Blue and purple emissions, typically at the lower edges of the "curtains", show up at the highest levels of solar activity. The molecular nitrogen transitions are much faster than the atomic oxygen ones.
- Ultraviolet: Ultraviolet radiation from auroras (within the optical window but not visible to virtually all humans) has been observed with the requisite equipment. Ultraviolet auroras have also been seen on Mars, Jupiter, and Saturn.
- Infrared: Infrared radiation, in wavelengths that are within the optical window, is also part of many auroras.
- Yellow and pink are a mix of red and green or blue. Other shades of red, as well as orange and gold, may be seen on rare occasions; yellow-green is moderately common. As red, green, and blue are linearly independent colours, additive synthesis could, in theory, produce most human-perceived colours, but the ones mentioned in this article comprise a virtually exhaustive list.
Changes with time
Auroras change with time. Over the night they begin with glows and progress toward coronas, although they may not reach them. They tend to fade in the opposite order. Until about 1963, it was thought that these changes are due to the rotation of the Earth under a pattern fixed with respect to the Sun. Later, it was found by comparing all-sky films of auroras from different places (collected during the International Geophysical Year) that they often undergo global changes in a process called auroral substorm. They change in a few minutes from quiet arcs all along the auroral oval to active displays along the darkside and after 1–3 hours they gradually change back. Changes in auroras over time are commonly visualized using keograms.
At shorter time scales, auroras can change their appearances and intensity, sometimes so slowly as to be difficult to notice, and at other times rapidly down to the sub-second scale. The phenomenon of pulsating auroras is an example of intensity variations over short timescales, typically with periods of 2–20 seconds. This type of aurora is generally accompanied by decreasing peak emission heights of about 8 km for blue and green emissions and above average solar wind speeds (c. 500 km/s).
Other auroral radiation
In addition, the aurora and associated currents produce a strong radio emission around 150 kHz known as auroral kilometric radiation (AKR), discovered in 1972. Ionospheric absorption makes AKR only observable from space. X-ray emissions, originating from the particles associated with auroras, have also been detected.
Noise
Aurora noise, similar to a crackling noise, begins about 70 m (230 ft) above Earth's surface and is caused by charged particles in an inversion layer of the atmosphere formed during a cold night. The charged particles discharge when particles from the Sun hit the inversion layer, creating the noise.
Unusual types
STEVE
In 2016, more than fifty citizen science observations described what was to them an unknown type of aurora which they named "STEVE", for "Strong Thermal Emission Velocity Enhancement". STEVE is not an aurora but is caused by a 25 km (16 mi) wide ribbon of hot plasma at an altitude of 450 km (280 mi), with a temperature of 3,000 °C (3,270 K; 5,430 °F) and flowing at a speed of 6 km/s (3.7 mi/s) (compared to 10 m/s (33 ft/s) outside the ribbon).
Picket-fence aurora
The processes that cause STEVE are also associated with a picket-fence aurora, although the latter can be seen without STEVE. It is an aurora because it is caused by precipitation of electrons in the atmosphere but it appears outside the auroral oval, closer to the equator than typical auroras. When the picket-fence aurora appears with STEVE, it is below.
Dune aurora
First reported in 2020, and confirmed in 2021, the dune aurora phenomenon was discovered by Finnish citizen scientists. It consists of regularly-spaced, parallel stripes of brighter emission in the green diffuse aurora which give the impression of sand dunes. The phenomenon is believed to be caused by the modulation of atomic oxygen density by a large-scale atmospheric wave travelling horizontally in a waveguide through an inversion layer in the mesosphere in presence of electron precipitation.
Horse-collar aurora
Horse-collar auroras (HCA) are auroral features in which the auroral ellipse shifts poleward during the dawn and dusk portions and the polar cap becomes teardrop-shaped. They form during periods when the interplanetary magnetic field (IMF) is permanently northward, when the IMF clock angle is small. Their formation is associated with the closure of the magnetic flux at the top of the dayside magnetosphere by the double lobe reconnection (DLR). There are approximately 8 HCA events per month, with no seasonal dependence, and that the IMF must be within 30 degrees of northwards.
Conjugate auroras
Conjugate auroras are nearly exact mirror-image auroras found at conjugate points in the northern and southern hemispheres on the same geomagnetic field lines. These generally happen at the time of the equinoxes, when there is little difference in the orientation of the north and south geomagnetic poles to the sun. Attempts were made to image conjugate auroras by aircraft from Alaska and New Zealand in 1967, 1968, 1970, and 1971, with some success.
Causes
A full understanding of the physical processes which lead to different types of auroras is still incomplete, but the basic cause involves the interaction of the solar wind with Earth's magnetosphere. The varying intensity of the solar wind produces effects of different magnitudes but includes one or more of the following physical scenarios.
- A quiescent solar wind flowing past Earth's magnetosphere steadily interacts with it and can both inject solar wind particles directly onto the geomagnetic field lines that are 'open', as opposed to being 'closed' in the opposite hemisphere and provide diffusion through the bow shock. It can also cause particles already trapped in the radiation belts to precipitate into the atmosphere. Once particles are lost to the atmosphere from the radiation belts, under quiet conditions, new ones replace them only slowly, and the loss-cone becomes depleted. In the magnetotail, however, particle trajectories seem constantly to reshuffle, probably when the particles cross the very weak magnetic field near the equator. As a result, the flow of electrons in that region is nearly the same in all directions ("isotropic") and assures a steady supply of leaking electrons. The leakage of electrons does not leave the tail positively charged, because each leaked electron lost to the atmosphere is replaced by a low energy electron drawn upward from the ionosphere. Such replacement of "hot" electrons by "cold" ones is in complete accord with the second law of thermodynamics. The complete process, which also generates an electric ring current around Earth, is uncertain.
- Geomagnetic disturbance from an enhanced solar wind causes distortions of the magnetotail ("magnetic substorms"). These 'substorms' tend to occur after prolonged spells (on the order of hours) during which the interplanetary magnetic field has had an appreciable southward component. This leads to a higher rate of interconnection between its field lines and those of Earth. As a result, the solar wind moves magnetic flux (tubes of magnetic field lines, 'locked' together with their resident plasma) from the day side of Earth to the magnetotail, widening the obstacle it presents to the solar wind flow and constricting the tail on the night-side. Ultimately some tail plasma can separate ("magnetic reconnection"); some blobs ("plasmoids") are squeezed downstream and are carried away with the solar wind; others are squeezed toward Earth where their motion feeds strong outbursts of auroras, mainly around midnight ("unloading process"). A geomagnetic storm resulting from greater interaction adds many more particles to the plasma trapped around Earth, also producing enhancement of the "ring current". Occasionally the resulting modification of Earth's magnetic field can be so strong that it produces auroras visible at middle latitudes, on field lines much closer to the equator than those of the auroral zone.
- Acceleration of auroral charged particles invariably accompanies a magnetospheric disturbance that causes an aurora. This mechanism, which is believed to predominantly arise from strong electric fields along the magnetic field or wave-particle interactions, raises the velocity of a particle in the direction of the guiding magnetic field. The pitch angle is thereby decreased and increases the chance of it being precipitated into the atmosphere. Both electromagnetic and electrostatic waves, produced at the time of greater geomagnetic disturbances, make a significant contribution to the energizing processes that sustain an aurora. Particle acceleration provides a complex intermediate process for transferring energy from the solar wind indirectly into the atmosphere.
The details of these phenomena are not fully understood. However, it is clear that the prime source of auroral particles is the solar wind feeding the magnetosphere, the reservoir containing the radiation zones and temporarily magnetically trapped particles confined by the geomagnetic field, coupled with particle acceleration processes.
Auroral particles
The immediate cause of the ionization and excitation of atmospheric constituents leading to auroral emissions was discovered in 1960, when a pioneering rocket flight from Fort Churchill in Canada revealed a flux of electrons entering the atmosphere from above. Since then an extensive collection of measurements has been acquired painstakingly and with steadily improving resolution since the 1960s by many research teams using rockets and satellites to traverse the auroral zone. The main findings have been that auroral arcs and other bright forms are due to electrons that have been accelerated during the final few 10,000 km or so of their plunge into the atmosphere. These electrons often, but not always, exhibit a peak in their energy distribution, and are preferentially aligned along the local direction of the magnetic field.
Electrons mainly responsible for diffuse and pulsating auroras have, in contrast, a smoothly falling energy distribution, and an angular (pitch-angle) distribution favouring directions perpendicular to the local magnetic field. Pulsations were discovered to originate at or close to the equatorial crossing point of auroral zone magnetic field lines. Protons are also associated with auroras, both discrete and diffuse.
Atmosphere
Auroras result from emissions of photons in Earth's upper atmosphere, above 80 km (50 mi), from ionized nitrogen atoms regaining an electron, and oxygen atoms and nitrogen based molecules returning from an excited state to ground state. They are ionized or excited by the collision of particles precipitated into the atmosphere. Both incoming electrons and protons may be involved. Excitation energy is lost within the atmosphere by the emission of a photon, or by collision with another atom or molecule:
- Oxygen emissions
- green or orange-red, depending on the amount of energy absorbed.
- Nitrogen emissions
- blue, purple or red; blue and purple if the molecule regains an electron after it has been ionized, red if returning to ground state from an excited state.
Oxygen is unusual in terms of its return to ground state: it can take 0.7 seconds to emit the 557.7 nm green light and up to two minutes for the red 630.0 nm emission. Collisions with other atoms or molecules absorb the excitation energy and prevent emission; this process is called collisional quenching. Because the highest parts of the atmosphere contain a higher percentage of oxygen and lower particle densities, such collisions are rare enough to allow time for oxygen to emit red light. Collisions become more frequent progressing down into the atmosphere due to increasing density, so that red emissions do not have time to happen, and eventually, even green light emissions are prevented.
This is why there is a colour differential with altitude; at high altitudes oxygen red dominates, then oxygen green and nitrogen blue/purple/red, then finally nitrogen blue/purple/red when collisions prevent oxygen from emitting anything. Green is the most common colour. Then comes pink, a mixture of light green and red, followed by pure red, then yellow (a mixture of red and green), and finally, pure blue.
Precipitating protons generally produce optical emissions as incident hydrogen atoms after gaining electrons from the atmosphere. Proton auroras are usually observed at lower latitudes.
Ionosphere
Bright auroras are generally associated with Birkeland currents (Schield et al., 1969; Zmuda and Armstrong, 1973), which flow down into the ionosphere on one side of the pole and out on the other. In between, some of the current connects directly through the ionospheric E layer (125 km); the rest ("region 2") detours, leaving again through field lines closer to the equator and closing through the "partial ring current" carried by magnetically trapped plasma. The ionosphere is an ohmic conductor, so some consider that such currents require a driving voltage, which an, as yet unspecified, dynamo mechanism can supply. Electric field probes in orbit above the polar cap suggest voltages of the order of 40,000 volts, rising up to more than 200,000 volts during intense magnetic storms. In another interpretation, the currents are the direct result of electron acceleration into the atmosphere by wave/particle interactions.
Ionospheric resistance has a complex nature, and leads to a secondary Hall current flow. By a strange twist of physics, the magnetic disturbance on the ground due to the main current almost cancels out, so most of the observed effect of auroras is due to a secondary current, the auroral electrojet. An auroral electrojet index (measured in nanotesla) is regularly derived from ground data and serves as a general measure of auroral activity. Kristian Birkeland deduced that the currents flowed in the east–west directions along the auroral arc, and such currents, flowing from the dayside toward (approximately) midnight were later named "auroral electrojets" (see also Birkeland currents). Ionosphere can contribute to the formation of auroral arcs via the feedback instability under high ionospheric resistance conditions, observed at night time and in dark Winter hemisphere.
Interaction of the solar wind with Earth
Earth is constantly immersed in the solar wind, a flow of magnetized hot plasma (a gas of free electrons and positive ions) emitted by the Sun in all directions, a result of the two-million-degree temperature of the Sun's outermost layer, the corona. The solar wind reaches Earth with a velocity typically around 400 km/s, a density of around 5 ions/cm and a magnetic field intensity of around 2–5 nT (for comparison, Earth's surface field is typically 30,000–50,000 nT). During magnetic storms, in particular, flows can be several times faster; the interplanetary magnetic field (IMF) may also be much stronger. Joan Feynman deduced in the 1970s that the long-term averages of solar wind speed correlated with geomagnetic activity. Her work resulted from data collected by the Explorer 33 spacecraft.
The solar wind and magnetosphere consist of plasma (ionized gas), which conducts electricity. It is well known (since Michael Faraday's work around 1830) that when an electrical conductor is placed within a magnetic field while relative motion occurs in a direction that the conductor cuts across (or is cut by), rather than along, the lines of the magnetic field, an electric current is induced within the conductor. The strength of the current depends on a) the rate of relative motion, b) the strength of the magnetic field, c) the number of conductors ganged together and d) the distance between the conductor and the magnetic field, while the direction of flow is dependent upon the direction of relative motion. Dynamos make use of this basic process ("the dynamo effect"), any and all conductors, solid or otherwise are so affected, including plasmas and other fluids.
The IMF originates on the Sun, linked to the sunspots, and its field lines (lines of force) are dragged out by the solar wind. That alone would tend to line them up in the Sun-Earth direction, but the rotation of the Sun angles them at Earth by about 45 degrees forming a spiral in the ecliptic plane, known as the Parker spiral. The field lines passing Earth are therefore usually linked to those near the western edge ("limb") of the visible Sun at any time.
The solar wind and the magnetosphere, being two electrically conducting fluids in relative motion, should be able in principle to generate electric currents by dynamo action and impart energy from the flow of the solar wind. However, this process is hampered by the fact that plasmas conduct readily along magnetic field lines, but less readily perpendicular to them. Energy is more effectively transferred by the temporary magnetic connection between the field lines of the solar wind and those of the magnetosphere. Unsurprisingly this process is known as magnetic reconnection. As already mentioned, it happens most readily when the interplanetary field is directed southward, in a similar direction to the geomagnetic field in the inner regions of both the north magnetic pole and south magnetic pole.
Auroras are more frequent and brighter during the intense phase of the solar cycle when coronal mass ejections increase the intensity of the solar wind.
Magnetosphere
Earth's magnetosphere is shaped by the impact of the solar wind on Earth's magnetic field. This forms an obstacle to the flow, diverting it, at an average distance of about 70,000 km (11 Earth radii or Re), producing a bow shock 12,000 km to 15,000 km (1.9 to 2.4 Re) further upstream. The width of the magnetosphere abreast of Earth is typically 190,000 km (30 Re), and on the night side a long "magnetotail" of stretched field lines extends to great distances (> 200 Re).
The high latitude magnetosphere is filled with plasma as the solar wind passes Earth. The flow of plasma into the magnetosphere increases with additional turbulence, density, and speed in the solar wind. This flow is favoured by a southward component of the IMF, which can then directly connect to the high latitude geomagnetic field lines. The flow pattern of magnetospheric plasma is mainly from the magnetotail toward Earth, around Earth and back into the solar wind through the magnetopause on the day-side. In addition to moving perpendicular to Earth's magnetic field, some magnetospheric plasma travels down along Earth's magnetic field lines, gains additional energy and loses it to the atmosphere in the auroral zones. The cusps of the magnetosphere, separating geomagnetic field lines that close through Earth from those that close remotely allow a small amount of solar wind to directly reach the top of the atmosphere, producing an auroral glow.
On 26 February 2008, THEMIS probes were able to determine, for the first time, the triggering event for the onset of magnetospheric substorms. Two of the five probes, positioned approximately one third the distance to the Moon, measured events suggesting a magnetic reconnection event 96 seconds prior to auroral intensification.
Geomagnetic storms that ignite auroras may occur more often during the months around the equinoxes. It is not well understood, but geomagnetic storms may vary with Earth's seasons. Two factors to consider are the tilt of both the solar and Earth's axis to the ecliptic plane. As Earth orbits throughout a year, it experiences an interplanetary magnetic field (IMF) from different latitudes of the Sun, which is tilted at 8 degrees. Similarly, the 23-degree tilt of Earth's axis about which the geomagnetic pole rotates with a diurnal variation changes the daily average angle that the geomagnetic field presents to the incident IMF throughout a year. These factors combined can lead to minor cyclical changes in the detailed way that the IMF links to the magnetosphere. In turn, this affects the average probability of opening a door through which energy from the solar wind can reach Earth's inner magnetosphere and thereby enhance auroras. Recent evidence in 2021 has shown that individual separate substorms may in fact be correlated networked communities.
Auroral particle acceleration
Just as there are many types of aurora, there are many different mechanisms that accelerate auroral particles into the atmosphere. Electron aurora in Earth's auroral zone (i.e. commonly visible aurora) can be split into two main categories with different immediate causes: diffuse and discrete aurora. Diffuse aurora appear relatively structureless to an observer on the ground, with indistinct edges and amorphous forms. Discrete aurora are structured into distinct features with well-defined edges such as arcs, rays and coronas; they also tend to be much brighter than the diffuse aurora.
In both cases, the electrons that eventually cause the aurora start out as electrons trapped by the magnetic field in Earth's magnetosphere. These trapped particles bounce back and forth along magnetic field lines and are prevented from hitting the atmosphere by the magnetic mirror formed by the increasing magnetic field strength closer to Earth. The magnetic mirror's ability to trap a particle depends on the particle's pitch angle: the angle between its direction of motion and the local magnetic field. An aurora is created by processes that decrease the pitch angle of many individual electrons, freeing them from the magnetic trap and causing them to hit the atmosphere.
In the case of diffuse auroras, the electron pitch angles are altered by their interaction with various plasma waves. Each interaction is essentially wave-particle scattering; the electron energy after interacting with the wave is similar to its energy before interaction, but the direction of motion is altered. If the final direction of motion after scattering is close to the field line (specifically, if it falls within the loss cone) then the electron will hit the atmosphere. Diffuse auroras are caused by the collective effect of many such scattered electrons hitting the atmosphere. The process is mediated by the plasma waves, which become stronger during periods of high geomagnetic activity, leading to increased diffuse aurora at those times.
In the case of discrete auroras, the trapped electrons are accelerated toward Earth by electric fields that form at an altitude of about 4000–12000 km in the "auroral acceleration region". The electric fields point away from Earth (i.e. upward) along the magnetic field line. Electrons moving downward through these fields gain a substantial amount of energy (on the order of a few keV) in the direction along the magnetic field line toward Earth. This field-aligned acceleration decreases the pitch angle for all of the electrons passing through the region, causing many of them to hit the upper atmosphere. In contrast to the scattering process leading to diffuse auroras, the electric field increases the kinetic energy of all of the electrons transiting downward through the acceleration region by the same amount. This accelerates electrons starting from the magnetosphere with initially low energies (tens of eV or less) to energies required to create an aurora (100s of eV or greater), allowing that large source of particles to contribute to creating auroral light.
The accelerated electrons carry an electric current along the magnetic field lines (a Birkeland current). Since the electric field points in the same direction as the current, there is a net conversion of electromagnetic energy into particle energy in the auroral acceleration region (an electric load). The energy to power this load is eventually supplied by the magnetized solar wind flowing around the obstacle of Earth's magnetic field, although exactly how that power flows through the magnetosphere is still an active area of research. While the energy to power the aurora is ultimately derived from the solar wind, the electrons themselves do not travel directly from the solar wind into Earth's auroral zone; magnetic field lines from these regions do not connect to the solar wind, so there is no direct access for solar wind electrons.
Some auroral features are also created by electrons accelerated by dispersive Alfvén waves. At small wavelengths transverse to the background magnetic field (comparable to the electron inertial length or ion gyroradius), Alfvén waves develop a significant electric field parallel to the background magnetic field. This electric field can accelerate electrons to keV energies, significant to produce auroral arcs. If the electrons have a speed close to that of the wave's phase velocity, they are accelerated in a manner analogous to a surfer catching an ocean wave. This constantly-changing wave electric field can accelerate electrons along the field line, causing some of them to hit the atmosphere. Electrons accelerated by this mechanism tend to have a broad energy spectrum, in contrast to the sharply-peaked energy spectrum typical of electrons accelerated by quasi-static electric fields.
In addition to the discrete and diffuse electron aurora, proton aurora is caused when magnetospheric protons collide with the upper atmosphere. The proton gains an electron in the interaction, and the resulting neutral hydrogen atom emits photons. The resulting light is too dim to be seen with the naked eye. Other aurora not covered by the above discussion include transpolar arcs (formed poleward of the auroral zone), cusp aurora (formed in two small high-latitude areas on the dayside) and some non-terrestrial auroras.
Historically significant events
The discovery of a 1770 Japanese diary in 2017 depicting auroras above the ancient Japanese capital of Kyoto suggested that the storm may have been 7% larger than the Carrington event, which affected telegraph networks.
The auroras that resulted from the Carrington event on both 28 August and 2 September 1859, are thought to be the most spectacular in recent history. In a paper to the Royal Society on 21 November 1861, Balfour Stewart described both auroral events as documented by a self-recording magnetograph at the Kew Observatory and established the connection between the 2 September 1859 auroral storm and the Carrington–Hodgson flare event when he observed that "It is not impossible to suppose that in this case our luminary was taken in the act." The second auroral event, which occurred on 2 September 1859, was a result of the (unseen) coronal mass ejection associated with the exceptionally intense Carrington–Hodgson white light solar flare on 1 September 1859. This event produced auroras so widespread and extraordinarily bright that they were seen and reported in published scientific measurements, ship logs, and newspapers throughout the United States, Europe, Japan, and Australia. It was reported by The New York Times that in Boston on Friday 2 September 1859 the aurora was "so brilliant that at about one o'clock ordinary print could be read by the light". One o'clock EST time on Friday 2 September would have been 6:00 GMT; the self-recording magnetograph at the Kew Observatory was recording the geomagnetic storm, which was then one hour old, at its full intensity. Between 1859 and 1862, Elias Loomis published a series of nine papers on the Great Auroral Exhibition of 1859 in the American Journal of Science where he collected worldwide reports of the auroral event.
That aurora is thought to have been produced by one of the most intense coronal mass ejections in history. It is also notable for the fact that it is the first time where the phenomena of auroral activity and electricity were unambiguously linked. This insight was made possible not only due to scientific magnetometer measurements of the era, but also as a result of a significant portion of the 125,000 miles (201,000 km) of telegraph lines then in service being significantly disrupted for many hours throughout the storm. Some telegraph lines, however, seem to have been of the appropriate length and orientation to produce a sufficient geomagnetically induced current from the electromagnetic field to allow for continued communication with the telegraph operator power supplies switched off. The following conversation occurred between two operators of the American Telegraph Line between Boston and Portland, Maine, on the night of 2 September 1859 and reported in the Boston Traveller:
Boston operator (to Portland operator): "Please cut off your battery entirely for fifteen minutes."
Portland operator: "Will do so. It is now disconnected."
Boston: "Mine is disconnected, and we are working with the auroral current. How do you receive my writing?"
Portland: "Better than with our batteries on. – Current comes and goes gradually."
Boston: "My current is very strong at times, and we can work better without the batteries, as the aurora seems to neutralize and augment our batteries alternately, making current too strong at times for our relay magnets. Suppose we work without batteries while we are affected by this trouble."
Portland: "Very well. Shall I go ahead with business?"
Boston: "Yes. Go ahead."
The conversation was carried on for around two hours using no battery power at all and working solely with the current induced by the aurora, and it was said that this was the first time on record that more than a word or two was transmitted in such manner. Such events led to the general conclusion that
The effect of the Aurora on the electric telegraph is generally to increase or diminish the electric current generated in working the wires. Sometimes it entirely neutralizes them, so that, in effect, no fluid is discoverable in them. The aurora borealis seems to be composed of a mass of electric matter, resembling in every respect, that generated by the electric galvanic battery. The currents from it change coming on the wires, and then disappear: the mass of the aurora rolls from the horizon to the zenith.
In May 2024, a series of solar storms caused the aurora borealis to be observed from as far south as Ferdows, Iran.
Historical views and folklore
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The earliest datable record of an aurora was recorded in the Bamboo Annals, a historical chronicle of the history of ancient China, in 977 or 957 BC. An aurora was described by the Greek explorer Pytheas in the 4th century BC. Seneca wrote about auroras in the first book of his Naturales Quaestiones, classifying them, for instance, as pithaei ('barrel-like'); chasmata ('chasm'); pogoniae ('bearded'); cyparissae ('like cypress trees'); and describing their manifold colours. He wrote about whether they were above or below the clouds, and recalled that under Tiberius, an aurora formed above the port city of Ostia that was so intense and red that a cohort of the army, stationed nearby for fire duty, galloped to the rescue. It has been suggested that Pliny the Elder depicted the aurora borealis in his Natural History, when he refers to trabes, chasma, "falling red flames", and "daylight in the night".
The earliest depiction of the aurora may have been in Cro-Magnon cave paintings of northern Spain dating to 30,000 BC.
The oldest known written record of the aurora was in a Chinese legend written around 2600 BC. On an autumn around 2000 BC, according to a legend, a young woman named Fubao was sitting alone in the wilderness by a bay, when suddenly a "magical band of light" appeared like "moving clouds and flowing water", turning into a bright halo around the Big Dipper, which cascaded a pale silver brilliance, illuminating the earth and making shapes and shadows seem alive. Moved by this sight, Fubao became pregnant and gave birth to a son, the Emperor Xuanyuan, known legendarily as the initiator of Chinese culture and the ancestor of all Chinese people. In the Shanhaijing, a creature named Shilong is described to be like a red dragon shining in the night sky with a body a thousand miles long. In ancient times, the Chinese did not have a fixed word for the aurora, so it was named according to the different shapes of the aurora, such as "Sky Dog" (天狗), "Sword/Knife Star" (刀星), "Chiyou banner" (蚩尤旗), "Sky's Open Eyes" (天开眼), and "Stars like Rain" (星陨如雨).
In Japanese folklore, pheasants were considered messengers from heaven. However, researchers from Japan's Graduate University for Advanced Studies and National Institute of Polar Research claimed in March 2020 that red pheasant tails witnessed across the night sky over Japan in 620 A.D., might be a red aurora produced during a magnetic storm.
In the traditions of Aboriginal Australians, the Aurora Australis is commonly associated with fire. For example, the Gunditjmara people of western Victoria called auroras puae buae ('ashes'), while the Gunai people of eastern Victoria perceived auroras as bushfires in the spirit world. The Dieri people of South Australia say that an auroral display is kootchee, an evil spirit creating a large fire. Similarly, the Ngarrindjeri people of South Australia refer to auroras seen over Kangaroo Island as the campfires of spirits in the 'Land of the Dead'. Aboriginal people in southwest Queensland believe the auroras to be the fires of the Oola Pikka, ghostly spirits who spoke to the people through auroras. Sacred law forbade anyone except male elders from watching or interpreting the messages of ancestors they believed were transmitted through an aurora.
Among the Māori people of New Zealand, aurora australis or Tahunui-a-rangi ("great torches in the sky") were lit by ancestors who sailed south to a "land of ice" (or their descendants); these people were said to be Ui-te-Rangiora's expedition party who had reached the Southern Ocean. around the 7th century.
In Scandinavia, the first mention of norðrljós (the northern lights) is found in the Norwegian chronicle Konungs Skuggsjá from AD 1230. The chronicler has heard about this phenomenon from compatriots returning from Greenland, and he gives three possible explanations: that the ocean was surrounded by vast fires; that the sun flares could reach around the world to its night side; or that glaciers could store energy so that they eventually became fluorescent.
Walter William Bryant wrote in his book Kepler (1920) that Tycho Brahe "seems to have been something of a homoeopathist, for he recommends sulfur to cure infectious diseases 'brought on by the sulfurous vapours of the Aurora Borealis'".
In 1778, Benjamin Franklin theorized in his paper Aurora Borealis, Suppositions and Conjectures towards forming an Hypothesis for its Explanation that an aurora was caused by a concentration of electrical charge in the polar regions intensified by the snow and moisture in the air:
May not then the great quantity of electricity brought into the polar regions by the clouds, which are condens'd there, and fall in snow, which electricity would enter the earth, but cannot penetrate the ice; may it not, I say (as a bottle overcharged) break thro' that low atmosphere and run along in the vacuum over the air towards the equator, diverging as the degrees of longitude enlarge, strongly visible where densest, and becoming less visible as it more diverges; till it finds a passage to the earth in more temperate climates, or is mingled with the upper air?
Observations of the rhythmic movement of compass needles due to the influence of an aurora were confirmed in the Swedish city of Uppsala by Anders Celsius and Olof Hiorter. In 1741, Hiorter was able to link large magnetic fluctuation to the observation of an aurora overhead. This evidence helped to support their theory that 'magnetic storms' are responsible for such compass fluctuations.
A variety of Native American myths surround the spectacle. The European explorer Samuel Hearne travelled with Chipewyan Dene in 1771 and recorded their views on the ed-thin ('caribou'). According to Hearne, the Dene people saw the resemblance between an aurora and the sparks produced when caribou fur is stroked. They believed that the lights were the spirits of their departed friends dancing in the sky, and when they shone brightly it meant that their deceased friends were very happy.
During the night after the Battle of Fredericksburg, an aurora was seen from the battlefield. The Confederate Army took this as a sign that God was on their side, as the lights were rarely seen so far south. The painting Aurora Borealis by Frederic Edwin Church is widely interpreted to represent the conflict of the American Civil War.
A mid 19th-century British source says auroras were a rare occurrence before the 18th century. It quotes Halley as saying that before the aurora of 1716, no such phenomenon had been recorded for more than 80 years, and none of any consequence since 1574. It says no appearance is recorded in the Transactions of the French Academy of Sciences between 1666 and 1716; and that one aurora recorded in Berlin Miscellany for 1797 was called a very rare event. One observed in 1723 at Bologna was stated to be the first ever seen there. Celsius (1733) states the oldest residents of Uppsala thought the phenomenon a great rarity before 1716. The period between approximately 1645 and 1715 corresponds to the Maunder minimum in sunspot activity.
In Robert W. Service's satirical poem "The Ballad of the Northern Lights" (1908), a Yukon prospector discovers that the aurora is the glow from a radium mine. He stakes his claim, then goes to town looking for investors.
In the early 1900s, the Norwegian scientist Kristian Birkeland laid the foundation for the current understanding of geomagnetism and polar auroras.
In Sami mythology, the northern lights are caused by the deceased who bled to death cutting themselves, their blood spilling on the sky. Many aboriginal peoples of northern Eurasia and North America share similar beliefs of northern lights being the blood of the deceased, some believing they are caused by dead warriors' blood spraying on the sky as they engage in playing games, riding horses or having fun in some other way.
Extraterrestrial aurorae
See also: Magnetosphere of Jupiter § AuroraeBoth Jupiter and Saturn have magnetic fields that are stronger than Earth's (Jupiter's equatorial field strength is 4.3 gauss, compared to 0.3 gauss for Earth), and both have extensive radiation belts. Auroras have been observed on both gas planets, most clearly using the Hubble Space Telescope, and the Cassini and Galileo spacecraft, as well as on Uranus and Neptune.
The aurorae on Saturn seem, like Earth's, to be powered by the solar wind. However, Jupiter's aurorae are more complex. Jupiter's main auroral oval is associated with the plasma produced by the volcanic moon Io, and the transport of this plasma within the planet's magnetosphere. An uncertain fraction of Jupiter's aurorae are powered by the solar wind. In addition, the moons, especially Io, are also powerful sources of aurora. These arise from electric currents along field lines ("field aligned currents"), generated by a dynamo mechanism due to the relative motion between the rotating planet and the moving moon. Io, which has active volcanism and an ionosphere, is a particularly strong source, and its currents also generate radio emissions, which have been studied since 1955. Using the Hubble Space Telescope, auroras over Io, Europa and Ganymede have all been observed.
Auroras have also been observed on Venus and Mars. Venus has no magnetic field and so Venusian auroras appear as bright and diffuse patches of varying shape and intensity, sometimes distributed over the full disc of the planet. A Venusian aurora originates when electrons from the solar wind collide with the night-side atmosphere.
An aurora was detected on Mars, on 14 August 2004, by the SPICAM instrument aboard Mars Express. The aurora was located at Terra Cimmeria, in the region of 177° east, 52° south. The total size of the emission region was about 30 km across, and possibly about 8 km high. By analysing a map of crustal magnetic anomalies compiled with data from Mars Global Surveyor, scientists observed that the region of the emissions corresponded to an area where the strongest magnetic field is localized. This correlation indicated that the origin of the light emission was a flux of electrons moving along the crust magnetic lines and exciting the upper atmosphere of Mars.
Between 2014 and 2016, cometary auroras were observed on comet 67P/Churyumov–Gerasimenko by multiple instruments on the Rosetta spacecraft. The auroras were observed at far-ultraviolet wavelengths. Coma observations revealed atomic emissions of hydrogen and oxygen caused by the photodissociation (not photoionization, like in terrestrial auroras) of water molecules in the comet's coma. The interaction of accelerated electrons from the solar wind with gas particles in the coma is responsible for the aurora. Since comet 67P has no magnetic field, the aurora is diffusely spread around the comet.
Exoplanets, such as hot Jupiters, have been suggested to experience ionization in their upper atmospheres and generate an aurora modified by weather in their turbulent tropospheres. However, there is no current detection of an exoplanet aurora.
The first ever extra-solar auroras were discovered in July 2015 over the brown dwarf star LSR J1835+3259. The mainly red aurora was found to be a million times brighter than the northern lights, a result of the charged particles interacting with hydrogen in the atmosphere. It has been speculated that stellar winds may be stripping off material from the surface of the brown dwarf to produce their own electrons. Another possible explanation for the auroras is that an as-yet-undetected body around the dwarf star is throwing off material, as is the case with Jupiter and its moon Io.
See also
- Airglow
- Aurora (heraldry)
- Heliophysics
- List of solar storms
- Paschen's law
- Space tornado
- Space weather
Explanatory notes
- Modern style guides recommend that the names of meteorological phenomena, such as aurora borealis, be uncapitalized.
- The name "auroras" is now the more common plural in the US; however, aurorae is the original Latin plural and is often used by scientists. In some contexts, aurora is an uncountable noun, multiple sightings being referred to as "the aurora".
- The aurorae seen in northern latitudes, around the Arctic, can be referred to as the northern lights or aurora borealis, while those seen in southern latitudes, around the Antarctic, are known as the southern lights or aurora australis. Polar lights and aurora polaris are the more general equivalents of these terms.
References
- "Southern Lights over the Australian Bight". NASA. Archived from the original on 21 October 2022. Retrieved 12 September 2022.
- "University of Minnesota Style Manual". .umn.edu. 18 July 2007. Archived from the original on 22 July 2010. Retrieved 5 August 2010.
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- Helling, Christiane; Rimmer, Paul B. (23 September 2019). "Lightning and charge processes in brown dwarf and exoplanet atmospheres". Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society A: Mathematical, Physical and Engineering Sciences. 377 (2154): 20180398. arXiv:1903.04565. Bibcode:2019RSPTA.37780398H. doi:10.1098/rsta.2018.0398. PMC 6710897. PMID 31378171.
- O'Neill, Ian (29 July 2015). "Monstrous Aurora Detected Beyond our Solar System". Discovery. Archived from the original on 31 July 2015. Retrieved 29 July 2015.
- Q. Choi, Charles (29 July 2015). "First Alien Auroras Found, Are 1 Million Times Brighter Than Any on Earth". space.com. Archived from the original on 30 July 2015. Retrieved 29 July 2015.
Further reading
- Procter, Henry Richardson (1878). "Aurora Polaris" . Encyclopædia Britannica. Vol. III (9th ed.). pp. 90–99.
- Chree, Charles (1911). "Aurora Polaris" . Encyclopædia Britannica. Vol. 2 (11th ed.). pp. 927–934. These two both include detailed descriptions of historical observations and descriptions.
- Stern, David P. (1996). "A Brief History of Magnetospheric Physics During the Space Age". Reviews of Geophysics. 34 (1): 1–31. Bibcode:1996RvGeo..34....1S. doi:10.1029/95rg03508.
- Stern, David P.; Peredo, Mauricio. "The Exploration of the Earth's Magnetosphere". phy6.org.
- Eather, Robert H. (1980). Majestic Lights: The Aurora in Science, History, and The Arts. Washington, DC: American Geophysical Union. ISBN 978-0-87590-215-9.
- Akasofu, Syun-Ichi (April 2002). "Secrets of the Aurora Borealis". Alaska Geographic Series. 29 (1).
- Daglis, Ioannis; Akasofu, Syun-Ichi (November 2004). "Aurora – The magnificent northern lights" (PDF). Recorder. 29 (9): 45–48. Archived from the original (PDF) on 14 June 2020. Alt URL
- Savage, Candace Sherk (1994). Aurora: The Mysterious Northern Lights. San Francisco: Sierra Club Books / Firefly Books. ISBN 978-0-87156-419-1.
- Hultqvist, Bengt (2007). "The Aurora". In Kamide, Y.; Chian, A (eds.). Handbook of the Solar-Terrestrial Environment. Berlin Heidelberg: Springer-Verlag. pp. 331–354. doi:10.1007/978-3-540-46315-3_13. ISBN 978-3-540-46314-6.
- Sandholt, Even; Carlson, Herbert C.; Egeland, Alv (2002). "Optical Aurora". Dayside and Polar Cap Aurora. Netherlands: Springer Netherlands. pp. 33–51. doi:10.1007/0-306-47969-9_3. ISBN 978-0-306-47969-4.
- Phillips, Tony (21 October 2001). "'tis the Season for Auroras". NASA. Archived from the original on 11 April 2006. Retrieved 15 May 2006.
- Davis, Neil (1992). The Aurora Watcher's Handbook. University of Alaska Press. ISBN 0-912006-60-9.
External links
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- Aurora forecast – Will there be northern lights?
- Current global map showing the probability of visible aurora
- Aurora – Forecasting (archived 24 November 2016)
- Official MET aurora forecasting in Iceland
- Aurora Borealis – Predicting
- Solar Terrestrial Data – Online Converter – Northern Lights Latitude
- Aurora Service Europe – Aurora forecasts for Europe (archived 11 March 2019)
- Live Northern Lights webstream
- World's Best Aurora – The Northwest Territories is the world's Northern Lights mecca.
Multimedia
- Amazing time-lapse video of Aurora Borealis – Shot in Iceland over the winter of 2013/2014
- Popular video of Aurora Borealis – Taken in Norway in 2011
- Aurora Photo Gallery – Views taken 2009–2011 (archived 4 October 2011)
- Aurora Photo Gallery – "Full-Sky Aurora" over Eastern Norway. December 2011
- Videos and Photos – Auroras at Night (archived 2 September 2010)
- Video (04:49) – Aurora Borealis – How The Northern Lights Are Created (video on YouTube)
- Video (47:40) – Northern Lights – Documentary
- Video (5:00) – Northern lights video in real time
- Video (01:42) – Northern Light – Story of Geomagnetic Storm (Terschelling Island – 6/7 April 2000) (archived 17 August 2011)
- Video (01:56) (time-lapse) − Auroras – Ground-Level View from Finnish Lapland 2011 (video on YouTube)
- Video (02:43) (time-lapse) − Auroras – Ground-Level View from Tromsø, Norway, 24 November 2010 (video on YouTube)
- Video (00:27) (time-lapse) – Earth and Auroras – Viewed from the International Space Station (video on YouTube)
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