Aurora
Aurora (astronomy) - Coloured light in the night sky  near the Earth’s magnetic poles, called aurora borealis (‘northern  lights’) in the northern hemisphere and aurora australis (‘southern  lights’) in the southern hemisphere. Although auroras are usually  restricted to the polar skies, fluctuations in the solar wind  occasionally cause them to be visible at lower latitudes. An aurora is  usually in the form of a luminous arch with its apex towards the  magnetic pole, followed by arcs, bands, rays, curtains, and coronae,  usually green but often showing shades of blue and red, and sometimes  yellow or white. Auroras are caused at heights of over 100 km/60 mi by a  fast stream of charged particles from solar flares and low-density  ‘holes’ in the Sun’s corona. These are guided by the Earth’s magnetic  field towards the north and south magnetic poles, where they enter the  upper atmosphere and bombard the gases in the atmosphere, causing them  to emit visible light.
Northern lights is the name of a light phenomenon  often seen in the northern regions. The lights have been around since  Earth formed an atmosphere -the dinosaurs saw it, early humans saw it  and our descendants will se it. The scientific name for the phenomenon  is “Aurora Borealis”, aurora for short.
Aurora australis, Invercargill
This photograph of the southern lights or aurora australis, most commonly seen in southern New Zealand, was taken in September 2002 from Invercargill. It shows a typical red and green aurora, the nearly vertical rays tracing the earth’s magnetic field lines. The M?ori name for Stewart Island, at the south of the South Island, is Rakiura, which means ‘glowing skies’. This may allude to the aurora australis, or simply to the dramatic southern sunsets.Aurora from Space
From space, the aurora is a crown of light that circles each of  Earth’s poles. The IMAGE (below) satellite captured this view of the  aurora australis (southern lights) on September 11, 2005, four days  after a record-setting solar flare sent plasma—an ionized gas of protons  and electrons—flying towards the Earth. The ring of light that the  solar storm generated over Antarctica glows green in the ultraviolet  part of the spectrum, shown in this image. The IMAGE observations of the  aurora are overlaid onto NASA’s satellite-based Blue Marble image. From  the Earth’s surface, the ring would appear as a curtain of light  shimmering across the night sky.
An aurora (plural aurorae/auroras) is an  electro-static phenomenon, characterised by a bright glow and caused by  the collision of charged particles in the magnetosphere with atoms in  the Earth’s upper atmosphere. An aurora is usually observed in the night  sky, particularly in the polar zone. For this latter reason, some  scientists call it a “polar aurora” (or “aurora polaris”). In northern  latitudes, it is known as the aurora borealis, which is named after the  Roman goddess of the dawn, Aurora, and the Greek name for north wind,  Boreas. Especially in Europe, it often appears as a reddish glow on the  northern horizon, as if the sun were rising from an unusual direction.  The aurora borealis is also called the northern lights since it is only  visible in the North sky from the Northern Hemisphere. The aurora  borealis most often occurs from September to October and from March to  April. Its southern counterpart, aurora australis, has similar  properties. Australis is the Latin word for “of the South”.
The Aurora Australis as seen from the Space Shuttle Discovery on  STS-39. The payload bay and tail of Discovery can be seen on the left  hand side of the picture. Auroras are caused when high-energy electrons  pour down from the Earth’s magnetosphere and collide with atoms. Red  aurora occurs from 200 km to as high as 500 km altitude and is caused by  the emission of 6300 Angstrom wavelength light from oxygen atoms. Green  aurora occurs from about 100 km to 250 km altitude and is caused by the  emission of 5577 Angstrom wavelength light from oxygen atoms. The light  is emitted when the atoms return to their original unexcited state.
Credit: Image Science and Analysis Laboratory,
NASA-Johnson Space Center: “The Gateway to Astronaut Photography of Earth.”
NASA-Johnson Space Center: “The Gateway to Astronaut Photography of Earth.”
Aurora Australis Observed From the International Space Station
Among the views of Earth afforded  astronauts aboard the International Space Station (ISS), surely one of  the most spectacular is of the aurora. These ever-shifting displays of  colored ribbons, curtains, rays, and spots are most visible near the  North (aurora borealis) and South (aurora australis) Poles as charged  particles (ions) streaming from the Sun (the solar wind) interact with  Earth’s magnetic field.
While aurora are generally only visible close to the poles,  severe magnetic storms impacting the Earth’s magnetic field can shift  them towards the equator. This striking aurora image was taken during a  geomagnetic storm that was most likely caused by a coronal mass ejection  from the Sun on May 24, 2010. The ISS was located over the Southern  Indian Ocean at an altitude of 350 kilometers (220 miles), with the  astronaut observer most likely looking towards Antarctica (not visible)  and the South Pole.
The aurora has a sinuous ribbon shape that separates into  discrete spots near the lower right corner of the image. While the  dominant coloration of the aurora is green, there are faint suggestions  of red left of image center. Dense cloud cover is dimly visible below  the aurora. The curvature of the Earth’s horizon (the limb) is clearly  visible, as is the faint blue line of the upper atmosphere directly  above it (at image top center). Several stars appear as bright pinpoints  against the blackness of space at image top right.
Auroras happen when ions in the solar wind collide with atoms of  oxygen and nitrogen in the upper atmosphere. The atoms are excited by  these collisions, and they typically emit light as they return to their  original energy level. The light creates the aurora that we see. The  most commonly observed color of aurora is green, caused by light emitted  by excited oxygen atoms at wavelengths centered at 0.558 micrometers,  or millionths of a meter. (Visible light is reflected from healthy  (green) plant leaves at approximately the same wavelength.) Red aurora  are generated by light emitted at a longer wavelength (0.630  micrometers), and other colors such as blue and purple are also  sometimes observed.
What causes the showers of charged particles that create the northern lights?
Ultimately, the source lies in the solar wind, a fast-moving stream  of particles constantly flowing from the Sun that carries the Sun’s  magnetic field out into space. The solar wind, typically moving at 250  miles (400 kilometers) per second, flows past Earth’s magnetic field and  molds it into an elongated bubble or cavity, compressing its sunward  side and stretching its night side far beyond the Moon’s orbit. Under  certain conditions, the solar wind’s magnetic field can merge with  Earth’s, creating electrical currents that drive protons and electrons  into the polar atmosphere. Powerful events occurring on the Sun can  drive enormous changes in the solar wind, increasing both its speed and  density and enhancing its effect on Earth.
Understanding just how Earth’s magnetic field responds to such events  is now a focus of much solar and space research. We are increasingly  dependent on technologies that are extremely sensitive to changes in the  space environment, changes often collectively referred to as “space  weather.” The story of Galaxy 4, a heavily used communications  satellite, serves as a good example. At 22h UT on May 19, 1998, while in  geostationary orbit above the central United States, Galaxy 4 lost its  primary and backup attitude control systems. At the time, Galaxy 4  handled about 80 percent of all U.S. pager traffic. Controllers could no  longer maintain a stable link between the satellite and Earth,  resulting in a loss of pager service to an estimated 45 million  customers. Researchers believe the incident occurred because a sequence  of solar events about two weeks prior to the failure created an  extremely energetic cloud of electrons that wreaked havoc with the  satellite.


