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Never seen the Northern Lights? Look here.

gsdx

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Captivating!

That was incredible to watch, to witness that in person would just be amazing.

Thanks for the link, that really did blow me away.

(*8*)
 
I live in newfoundland canada, at certain times of the year we can see them this far south
 
Thanks, gsdx! And, if anyone is interested in the inner workings of what causes the Northern Lights...

The Northern Lights are actually the result of collisions between gaseous particles in the Earth's atmosphere with charged particles released from the sun's atmosphere. Variations in colour are due to the type of gas particles that are colliding. The most common auroral color, a pale yellowish-green, is produced by oxygen molecules located about 60 miles above the earth. Rare, all-red auroras are produced by high-altitude oxygen, at heights of up to 200 miles. Nitrogen produces blue or purplish-red aurora.


The connection between the Northern Lights and sunspot activity has been suspected since about 1880. Thanks to research conducted since the 1950's, we now know that electrons and protons from the sun are blown towards the earth on the 'solar wind'. (Note: 1957-58 was International Geophysical Year and the atmosphere was studied extensively with balloons, radar, rockets and satellites. Rocket research is still conducted by scientists at Poker Flats, a facility under the direction of the University of Alaska at Fairbanks - see web page http://www.gi.alaska.edu/


The temperature above the surface of the sun is millions of degrees Celsius. At this temperature, collisions between gas molecules are frequent and explosive. Free electrons and protons are thrown from the sun's atmosphere by the rotation of the sun and escape through holes in the magnetic field. Blown towards the earth by the solar wind, the charged particles are largely deflected by the earth's magnetic field. However, the earth's magnetic field is weaker at either pole and therefore some particles enter the earth's atmosphere and collide with gas particles. These collisions emit light that we perceive as the dancing lights of the north (and the south).


The lights of the Aurora generally extend from 80 kilometres (50 miles) to as high as 640 kilometres (400 miles) above the earth's surface.
 
"The Aurora Borealis shining down in Dallas - Can you picture that ? "


^ A free box of Girl Scout cookies for anyone who tell me where that obscure lyrical snippet comes from without Google-ing it ! ;)


(Great footage, BTW, gsdx ! Thanks for sharing that. (*8*))
 
Amazing video, I've been it many times. :)
 
I've only ever seen them once when I was in Peterborough (very rare to see them that far south in the UK) and it has to have been one the most incredible sights I've ever seen in my life. There really aren't enough adjectives to both describe and do them justice. Amazing.
 
That was stunningly beautiful! I love the marvels of nature. Watching that video made me wish that I could fly, (totally insulated from the cold of course), all through that area and just bask in the splendor of it all.
 
For those who haven't seen them, keep in mind they move that quickly only in time-lapse photography, which also makes them very brilliant. They move much more lazily in reality.

I've seen them nearly that brilliant, however, on a drive to Fort McMurray, Alberta, north of Edmonton. And once, while driving east across the prairies at night in the dead of winter, I had to pull over so I could get out of the car and watch.

They stretched from the northern horizon where they were as red and yellow as they were green to directly overhead, a rarity if ever there was one. Overhead they swirled like a cosmic whirlpool, even as cars driven by the blind sped past in both directions. The overhead display lasted about 15 minutes.

I see them every winter, but never like that whirlpool, before or after. It was a sight I'll never forget and I feel extremely lucky to have witnessed it.
 
I saw a GREAT display in southern Yukon, Canada in late august 1986. It was a special treat that I had about two hours earlier picked up a 19-year-old woman hitchhiker (from Perth, Australia!) who was going to Whitehorse, because when it got dark enough for the lights to erupt in all their glory, she was seeing them for her first time EVER, and I was seeing the only "great" display I've ever seen to this day.
 
"The Aurora Borealis shining down in Dallas - Can you picture that ? "


^ A free box of Girl Scout cookies for anyone who tell me where that obscure lyrical snippet comes from without Google-ing it ! ;)


(Great footage, BTW, gsdx ! Thanks for sharing that. (*8*))

If I remember correctly it had something to do with the Muppets.
 
Superb. I've never seen the Northern Lights, but many years ago, while hiking in Tasmania, I was privileged to see the Southern Lights. I've never forgotten the magnificence of the sight.

-T.
 
For those who haven't seen them, keep in mind they move that quickly only in time-lapse photography, which also makes them very brilliant. They move much more lazily in reality.

Indeed. I was going to explain that they move more like sheer curtains wafting in a gentle breeze, but I didn't want to spoil the effect of the video.

Sadly, this far south in Ontario, we rarely (if ever) get them in colour.
 
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