Then I went to the Upper Peninsula and saw them with a frequency I may never again have the opportunity to experience. Reds, greens, whites, and even tints of purple appeared almost monthly above the cresting valley ridge on the other side of the canal.

But what causes these sporadic displays of electrical art? Well, it took me a long time to understand...so here goes:
The earth is surrounded by a magnetic field, originating from deep within its core. The field is strongest at its magnetic poles and weakest around the equator. The sun has a much larger magnetic field, which extends through the orbit of the earth. This field combined with fusion particles and radiation constitute solar wind.
Solar wind acts upon the earth's magnetic field in much the same way normal wind would act upon a pile of sand: the windward side is stretched and extended into the leeward side to create a tail like a melting comet.

This all takes place in the magnetosphere and as the voltage pushes the charged particles towards the poles, they amass and are pulled closer into the ionosphere. There, they react with ionosphere gases and the resulting reaction discharges visible electrical energy...light.

3 comments:
nice post. reminds me of this little ballad:
you stare at the sky
colors reflecting in your eye
could it be
what they call the northern lights?
and here
and at this time of year
it's like someone spilled a beer
all over the atmosphere
it's like someone spilled a beer
-- from "sky phenomenon" by swedish troubadour jens lekman
I know there is a science to it, but I still find them a wonder. I haven't seen them, except for a faint flicker once. I would love to go up north, far up north to see them.
Hey Andrew,
did you see that NASA is sending out a record number of satellites, six on one rocket, to investigate the northern lights?
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