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Download I. What are Auroras?
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by Martina Stumpp Overview I. II. III. IV. V. What are Auroras? What causes them? Auroral Zone Colors Auroras on other planets I. What are Auroras? • natural light displays in the sky • usually observed at night and in polar regions • occur in the ionosphere Names • in northern latitudes: aurora borealis – Aurora = Roman goddess of dawn – Boreas = Greek name for north wind • in southern latitudes: aurora australis – Australis = Latin word for “of the South” • northern lights, polar lights II. What causes them? • origin: the sun • sun’s energy comes from its interior – the temperature exceeds 15 million degrees K – hydrogen is transformed into helium • solar activity varies over periods of approx. 11 years • latest solar maximum: 2001-2002 • next is expected: 2011-2012 Sunspots • created by strong magnetic fields on the surface of the sun • appear darker cool compared to surroundings • visual indications of the process that sends charged particles into space Solar Wind • gas of electrons and positive ions emitted from the sun • velocity: around 300-1000 km/h • density: 5 ions/cm^3 • carries out sun’s magnetic field IMF • magnetic field intensity: 2-6 nT • during magnetic storms: faster & stronger Formation • similar to the mechanism of a generator with a moving conductor in a magnetic field • protons and positive ions are diverted to the left, electrons to the right – they form the pos. & neg. pole of the generator • the magnetosphere is filled with plasma which allows electricity to flow between the poles – positive pole, ionosphere, negative pole, polar region • accelerated electrons collide with atoms & molecules in the atmosphere – collision energy between solar particles and gas molecules is emitted as a photon – many collisions form the aurora III. Auroral Zone- “Auroral Oval” • seen from space, auroras appear as a ring shaped region around the poles • seen most often and with greatest intensity • altitude: 100km – 1000km • latitude: 60° – 75° north / south • at midnight the oval is nearly twice as wide and twice as far from the poles than at midday • shapes and locations of the ovals vary with solar activity • the reason of an aurora occurring within this zone is due to the slant of the IMF lines • when IMF & geomagnetic field are anti-parallel, IMF can partially cancel Earth’s magnetic field (“southward Bz”) – solar wind can reach Earth’s atmosphere • Earth’s magnetic dipole axis is most closely aligned with the IMF in April & October Where and when can we observe Auroras? • the light can be observed only from the inside of the oval ring, NOT on the pole itself • oval around the north pole stays in the areas of – – – – – Nordic countries Greenland Alaska Canada Russia • aurora “season” – late September/early October to late March – not in the summer the sun never sets • auroras can be predicted three days in advance – a magnetometer measures the effect that solar particles will have on Earth’s magnetosphere Forecast for Tuesday, January 27, 2009 IV. Colors • auroral spectrum is not continuous – composed of a series of spectral lines in the visible, the UV, the infrared and x-ray ranges • electrically charged particles excite the atmospheric gas – electron is bumped up into a higher orbit • the excited particle is unstable – electron falls back to its original state – excess energy is released by emitting light • a particular gas emits photons of a fixed wavelength – aurora = atmosphere’s fingerprint • atmosphere consists of nitrogen and oxygen – atomic oxygen: green & red – molecular nitrogen & nitrogen ions: red & blue/violet • the altitude affects auroral color • level of solar wind activity influences the color Auroral Intensity • weak: diffuse band of light, brightness of the Milky Way • medium-strength: brighter than most stars • strong: comparable to light of the moon Forms and Structures • diffuse surfaces – large, occur in the mornings, difficult to observe • spiral structures – occur during disturbed conditions, visually impressive • auroral pulsations – occur often, resemble puffs or flames • active & quiet forms – active: ray structures “curtains” with rapid variation – quiet: homogeneous arcs and bands, diffuse surfaces V. Auroras on other Planets • they occur on celestial bodies that have an atmosphere and a magnetic field – Jupiter, Saturn, Uranus, Neptune • Venus, Mars and our moon do not have their own magnetic fields • Io doesn’t have an atmosphere, but active volcanoes which temporarily create one Sources • www.northern-lights.no • http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Aurora_(astron omy) • Metzler Physik, J.Grehn, J. Krause