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Friday 23 August 2013

VIDEO: RARE NIGHT-SKY PHENOMENA


New Picture 37
Rippling Noctilucent Clouds Eerily Glow With an Aurora
By Phil Plait,
Slate, 20 August 2013.

It’s weird to think that there are phenomena so close to home as clouds, yet so poorly understood. But noctilucent clouds fit the bill: These high-altitude, rippling phenomena haunt the late twilight sky, and it’s not clear how they form and change. They’re somewhat rare, and rarer still to see with an aurora.

Photographer Maciej Winiarczyk got lucky. He was in northern Scotland on the night of Aug. 4 and was able to capture not only those gossamer webs of glowing ice crystals, but the northern lights as well in this amazing time-lapse video.


Spectacular. My favourite part is at 1:45, when the aurora bursts into life, flashing lush pink and purple colours as nitrogen molecules high in the air are bombarded by the solar wind.

Noctilucent clouds are illuminated by the Sun as well, and are due to incredibly small ice crystals about 75-85 kilometres (45-50 miles) above the Earth’s surface. The crystals are only 0.1 microns in size; a human hair is a thousand times thicker. The aurorae inhabit a region just a dozen or so kilometres higher than the clouds, both in rarefied atmospheric conditions.

The history of these clouds is fascinating, and Wikipedia has an excellent description. I’ve never seen them, as you have to be at extreme latitudes to catch a glimpse. The same is generally true for aurorae. I was hoping to see some when I was in Australia, but alas, no such good fortune for me. And with the Sun not playing along lately, I despair of ever seeing a full-blown display.

Oh well. There’s always the next solar cycle.

Top image: Purple and green and pink aurorae come to life above noctilucent clouds. Note the Big Dipper in the middle left. Photo by Maciej Winiarczyk, from the video.

[Source: Slate. Edited.]


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