Aurora Lights Up the Sky

June 25, 2004
by Imelda B. Joson

The Sun's current sunspot cycle may be on the decline but our nearest star still continues to pack a lot of punch — to the delight of aurora watchers worldwide. At 16:20 Universal Time on Sunday, November 4th, a powerful X-class flare unleashed a fast-moving coronal mass ejection. This gust of ionized solar wind impacted Earth's magnetosphere on Monday night, triggering a geomagnetic storm and a display of northern lights reaching as far south as Georgia, Texas, and California. In the Southern Hemisphere, the corresponding displays of southern lights awed skygazers in New Zealand and elsewhere.

An indication of the geomagnetic storm's intensity are the vivid colors of the auroral displays. Auroras typically cast a greenish glow, the light emitted by oxygen atoms high in the upper atmosphere after they are bombarded by electrons from Earth's magnetosphere. Monday night's displays also exhibited rarer blood-red colors, which sometimes involve ionized nitrogen molecules lower down in the atmosphere.

Jen Winter, observing from a relatively dark site in Bonner Springs, Kansas, with her husband, Vic, and several members of their local astronomy club, saw a giant arch of pale green, almost like a rainbow, over the trees to the north. "The Moon was starting to creep up on the eastern horizon," she reports, "but it was no match for the aurora's crimson patches. At times the red glow reached Cygnus, but other times the red was nearly gone, leaving only green. We needed the whole horizon to catch all of the display, which appeared, faded, and then reappeared."

Sky & Telescope contributing photographer Tony Hallas was on his way to his backyard observatory in Foresthill, California, at around 6:45 p.m. local time when he noticed the red glow to the northeast. "White shafts of light could be seen during this time," he says. "At 7:15 p.m. the green display began. The sky to the northeast became very bright red on top and green underneath. A large section of the green broke off from the main body and traveled northward along the horizon. The aurora was so bright it illuminated the surrounding forest! By 8 p.m. the show was subsiding. Then 15 minutes later there was a new burst of activity, with bigger and more pronounced white shafts of light. This slowly tapered off, leaving only a diffuse red glow till the Moon rose at around 9 p.m. Even at midnight, through strong moonlight and some thin clouds, I could still detect the red glow to the northeast."



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