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Transcript
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