Saturday, November 16, 2024

Northern lights seen across parts of England

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The northern lights lit up the skies with bright pink hues on Thursday night. Photos of the dazzling natural phenomenon, also known as the aurora borealis, were captured across England.

The aurora borealis lights up the night sky behind the Reculver towers and roman fort in Herne Bay, Kent. Photograph: Dan Kitwood/Getty Images

The lights could be seen as far south as London, Kent and East Anglia.

Farther north in Lancaster, Prof Jim Wild, 49, viewed the northern lights from his back garden. The academic, who researches the aurora and space weather at Lancaster University, said: “My research focuses on the physics of the connections between the sun and the Earth.

The lights over the causeway leading to Holy Island in Northumberland. Photograph: Owen Humphreys/PA

“Over the years I’ve been to the Arctic Circle several times to make measurements of the aurora, but it’s really special to see the northern lights from your back garden with your whole family.”

The lights over the River Wey in Godalming, Surrey. Photograph: James Jagger/Alamy

The Met Office said relatively clear skies were forecast for much of the UK, creating a “decent chance of visibility”.

A spokesperson for the forecaster said there had been “more space weather events in recent months”, including the northern lights, because the sun was nearing the peak of its solar cycle.

The Knockin Radio Telescope near Oswestry, Shropshire. Photograph: British News and Media/Alamy

The auroras, which are most commonly seen over high polar latitudes but can spread south, are chiefly influenced by geomagnetic storms that originate from activity on the sun.

The sun has a cycle of about 11 years. Peak sunspot activity on the surface of the sun is referred to as solar maximum.

The view from Ringmer, East Sussex. Photograph: Lee Dalton/Avalon

Sunspots give the potential for Earth-directed releases of large bursts of energy called coronal mass ejections, which can lead to aurora visibility.

Aurora displays occur when charged particles collide with gases in the Earth’s atmosphere around the magnetic poles. As they collide, light is emitted at various wavelengths, creating colourful displays in the sky.

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