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Northern Lights

Northern Lights

By F sapkotaPublished 4 years ago 4 min read
Northern Lights
Photo by Benjamin Suter on Unsplash

In the explosion of colored light, the northern light collides with the electrons in the atoms, and the electrons return to their original low-energy state, a process that releases photons (light particles) known as auroras after a collision. Scientists say that their bright colors are caused by the pleasing gases from the earth's atmosphere, especially oxygen, which emits the green color of the aurora borealis.

Many astronomical phenomena, called Aurora Borealis or Aurora Borealis, are natural phenomena in the northern and southern hemispheres. Northern lights, poles, or curtains of colored light can be seen from time to time in the night sky, in the middle of it. Aurora Borealis and Aurora Borealis occur in the southern polar region.

Canada is one of the most beautiful places in the world to see aurora borealis. It owns up to 80-90% of the earth's Aurora Oval, the site of the largest geomagnetic activity producing the brightest and most common auroras in the world. The capital of the Northwest Territories along the coast of Great Slave Lake is a paradise of the aurora borealis due to its northern range and low light pollution. Buffalo and Jasper National Parks are popular hotspots. The region has its own cold climates and special Northern Lights tourism activities.

Travelers from all over the world come to Alaska to see the Lights Lights - also known as the Aurora Borealis - a colorful ribbon dancing in the dark night sky - and to enjoy other winter experiences such as snowboarding, dog sledding, skiing, festivals, and sporting events. The northern lights come on each year four times, but they are difficult to see because of the midnight sun. A great time to watch the aurora borealis thanks to the long dark and clear night nights from December to March (aurora borealis can be seen from August).

Fairbanks is known for its Aurora Borealis and attracts people from all over the world Aurora Borealis. You can fly to Fairbanks and be on the mainland of the Aurora Borealis in less than an hour. There is no guarantee that you will be better than your chances of seeing a great light show.

Continue reading the frequently asked questions, answers, and other useful information about the famous Fairbanks aurora borealis. Check out the three-day forecast and 30-minute forecast, download your favorite Aurora Borealis app, hope for a clear night sky, dress well, and head out. Although it is a dark and clear night, there is still a chance to see the aurora borealis despite the need for sunlight.

Cities can produce ambient light that can disrupt the aurora borealis. If aurora can be seen in the city, it is best to watch them on the outskirts of the city or in an area known for dark skies. The best opportunities are in the southern part of Tasmania, Australia, and New Zealand, where the dark sky can help you see the active aurora in the southern hemisphere. Darker areas with lower cloud cover provide more opportunities to see the aurora borealis.

Aurora borealis is light in the northern hemisphere, which means "dawn west." Auroras on Earth are the southernmost ally of lights in the Antarctic sky in the south of the country, known as the australis. In 1616, astronomer Galileo used Galileo's name Aurora borealis to describe the Lanterns of the North, taking their name from the Roman mythical goddess Aurora and the Greek name North Wind, Boreas.

The bright aurora seen in the north and south of the country is shaped like an oval centered on magnetic poles. They grow up to 80 miles in height and 640 miles above the surface. Aurora is seen from 60 degrees north and wide and marks north to this latitude, and from the south, they are called auroras.

The bright lights of the aurora can be seen on the magnetic poles of the Northern and Southern Hemisphere. Due to the nature of the geomagnetic field, aurora emerges from both poles. The location and size of the aurora borealis, which appears as a green oval in the middle of the geomagnetic poles.

What is happening in Aurora Borealis is similar to what is happening with neon lights in many business signs. The aurora looks like a bright curtain, but it actually swells an arc that follows the power line of the geomagnetic field.

Northern lights are the result of the collision of gaseous particles in the Earth's atmosphere with circular particles released from the solar system. The bright light of the aurora dance collides between the charged particles from the sun and those entering the atmosphere. These charged particles bring energy to the earth's atmosphere, where they combine with oxygen and nitrogen atoms, blinding the aurora.

When solar flares hit the sun's particles and molecules, they delight and brighten. In some cases, the electrons that produce aurora begin when they are trapped in the earth's magnetic field.

The change in the earth's magnetic field is so intense that it produces aurora borealis, which is visible in the center where the field joins the equator in the polar region.

Mars, which is small and has no earth aurora, encounters local aurora only because of its magnetic field. NASA's MAVEN (Mars Atmosphere and Volatile Evolution) has discovered that aurora borealis scattered across the Northern Hemisphere occurs when strong particles hit the Martian atmosphere.

nature

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F sapkota

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