BBC Sky at Night Magazine

A PASSION FOR SPACE

The Sky at Night presenter is blown away by her first aurora – much like the particles that cause them

- with Maggie Aderin-Pocock Maggie Aderin-Pocock co-presents The Sky at Night and CBeebies Stargazing

With The Sky at Night co-presenter Maggie Aderin-Pocock.

The past few years I have spent working on The Sky at Night have been a privilege and it has led to some incredible opportunit­ies: reporting on the descent of the Philae lander onto Comet 67P; being present at NASA as New Horizons flew past Pluto, and discussing some of the first images that the probe returned; and, this year, I was able to fulfil a childhood dream of seeing the Northern Lights.

We looked into a number of options to hunt down the aurora borealis. They can be seen from northern Scotland, but the probabilit­y of seeing them so far south is low. Flying north from Leeds on a dedicated ‘aurora flight’ was also considered, but in the end we settled on a visit to Tromsø, a Norwegian town high in the Arctic Circle amongst the fjords. With an 80 per cent chance of seeing the Northern Lights from there, it was definitely our best shot.

Aurorae were once simply thought to be caused by the flow of charged particles from the Sun – the solar wind – interactin­g with the Earth’s magnetic field: as the particles spiralled down Earth’s magnetic field lines, they ionised gases in the atmosphere causing them to glow, just like a neon tube. However, new research indicates that this cannot be the complete picture. Measuremen­ts of particle speeds show that they themselves do not have enough energy to generate the light that we see. Another source of energy is needed, something that kicks the gas particles into the Earth’s atmosphere at high speed.

Snap change

Scientists eventually realised that it was energy ‘banked’ into the electric and magnetic field of the solar wind itself. As the charged gas (plasma) shoots out of the Sun, it generates its own magnetic field, which travels to Earth with the particles. As this hits Earth’s own magnetic field, the two fields react with each other, compressin­g and pushing and twisting until – suddenly – the magnetic field lines themselves snap and reform. And in that snapping a flash of energy is released; it is this kick that speeds up the particles as they head down into Earth’s atmosphere, and that fast, dynamic kick is enough to cause them to ionise the atmosphere.

The result is magnificen­t: I had expected shimmering bands of light filling the whole sky from the pictures I had seen, but what surprised me was the dynamic nature of the aurora’s movement. Scintillat­ions danced fast across the sky, sheets of light expanded like ink spreading on blotting paper. It was one of the most glorious astronomic­al phenomena I have seen to date and it brought to life the movement of the solar wind. I had known it was there, but to see it displayed in a flurry of light was truly amazing.

Even with our better understand­ing of the phenomena the aurora is still throwing up mysteries. Quite why it forms into regular patterns remains hard to explain, and there’s also a phenomena known as ‘Steve’, in which a column of light is produced, the causes of which are still being investigat­ed. It’s good to know that there are plenty of reasons for me to try and see them again sometime!

 ??  ??
 ??  ?? A breathtaki­ng auroral displays dances over the snow in Tromsø, Norway
A breathtaki­ng auroral displays dances over the snow in Tromsø, Norway
 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom