Energy Source of Northern Lights Found

by Brian A Kennedy | December 12, 2007 at 04:42 am
1512 views | 25 Recommendations | 15 comments

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Wonders of the Natural World - Northern Lights

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Wonders of the Natural World - Northern Lights
Now this is cool -- new data from NASA's five-satellite Themis mission reportedly shows that the Northern Lights are powered by a stream of charged particles flowing through magnetic fields and... ah, just read it.
SAN FRANCISCO - Scientists think they have discovered the energy source of the spectacular color displays seen in the northern lights. New data from NASA's Themis mission, a quintet of satellites launched this winter, found the energy comes from a stream of charged particles from the sun flowing like a current through twisted bundles of magnetic fields connecting Earth's upper atmosphere to the sun.

 
The energy is then abruptly released in the form of a shimmering display of lights visible in the upper latitudes of the Northern Hemisphere, said principal investigator Vassilis Angelopoulos of the University of California, Los Angeles.

 
Results were presented Tuesday at the American Geophysical Union meeting.

 
In March, the satellites detected a burst of northern lights, or auroras borealis, over Alaska and Canada. During the two-hour light show, the satellites measured particle flow and magnetic fields from space.

 
To scientists' surprise, the geomagnetic storm powering the auroras raced 400 miles in a minute across the sky. Angelopoulos estimated the storm's power was equal to the energy released by a magnitude 5.5 earthquake.

 
"Nature was very kind to us," Angelopoulos said.

 
Although researchers have suspected the existence of wound-up bundles of magnetic fields that provide energy for the auroras, the phenomenon was not confirmed until May, when the satellites became the first to map their structure some 40,000 miles above the Earth's surface.

 
Scientists hope the satellites will record a geomagnetic storm next year that's now in the making, and end the debate about when the storms are triggered.
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catarina_555

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catarina_555

I was prepared for these, I expected them to appear. After having checked the increasing tendencies of Kp index I just had to find a non-cloudy place so I left Northern Norway and drove through the heavy snowfall around the border and the cloudy zones. Drove about 90 km from Narvik on the E10 toward Kiruna - the sky was already clear and the first Aurora appeared around 8PM. Was standing there freezing and shooting for about two hours. I am sure the show continued all night, though. :-)

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catarina_555

Kp index here

 

 

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Ryd4

N/A to this subject. These were taken in Bodø (Bodo), Norway 11.12.2007

Rob Walker
Rob Walker
flagged this story as Good Stuff

at 05:48 on December 12th, 2007

And here I thought the northern lights were caused by excess emissions from Santa's workshop.

See, this is why I'm a writer and not a scientist!

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TryingToPanda

We waited and waited for about 2 hours in -5 degree cold in the middle of the night. When we did see it though - very, very, very faintly in the night sky, it still was absolutely worth it.

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Outdoorsie

This photo was requested from my Flickr site, and I'm happy to let you use it. But it's not a shot of the northern lights. This is a sunrise under high level ice clouds. Totally different thing. Still pretty, though.

ryan
ryan
flagged this story as Good Stuff

at 07:28 on December 12th, 2007

Brian A Kennedy, i suspected they'd be good for something one day.

Jordan Yerman
Jordan Yerman
flagged this story as Good Stuff

at 07:34 on December 12th, 2007

That is fascinating. For some reason, I always thought the Aurora Borealis was caused by atmospheric refraction or something.

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fjalarinn

Taken in Hvalfjörður (Whale fjord) in Iceland. Northern lights over the Aluminium Factory at Grundartangi.

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Rob Peters

Cool, this will make me a better dad if I ever have children.  ("Where do those lights come from Dad?")

cynthia yoo
cynthia yoo
flagged this story as Good Stuff

at 13:38 on December 12th, 2007

I love them fotos~~

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matte

NASA must not have anything new to report, this has been known for decades.

 

Would like to see them one day - I wonder if a wamer earth will create more charged particles -  now that would be interesting! 

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chimpaction

Taken in Alford, Aberdeenshire, Scotland

chimpaction has contributed a photo to this story.

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appletini

i didn't really take these pictures they were emailed to me from a friend. so i can't really comment.

appletini has contributed a photo to this story.

This story was created over 3 months ago, the comment thread is now closed.

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Rob Walker
First Flagged at 5:48 AM, Dec 12, 2007 by Rob Walker
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