Dubai Telegraph - 'Party atmosphere': Skygazers treated to another aurora show

EUR -
AED 4.019655
AFN 73.874127
ALL 99.04456
AMD 423.706432
ANG 1.973536
AOA 1000.802787
ARS 1066.763254
AUD 1.619657
AWG 1.970407
AZN 1.864768
BAM 1.958452
BBD 2.210973
BDT 130.857183
BGN 1.955645
BHD 0.412478
BIF 3166.550309
BMD 1.094367
BND 1.430324
BOB 7.594213
BRL 6.157569
BSD 1.095073
BTN 92.028424
BWP 14.532146
BYN 3.583505
BYR 21449.589101
BZD 2.207208
CAD 1.505657
CDF 3146.30492
CHF 0.937549
CLF 0.036775
CLP 1014.938082
CNY 7.733785
CNH 7.737491
COP 4607.470232
CRC 565.660745
CUC 1.094367
CUP 29.00072
CVE 110.973054
CZK 25.292463
DJF 194.491297
DKK 7.460233
DOP 66.111128
DZD 145.774565
EGP 53.162592
ERN 16.415502
ETB 132.623193
FJD 2.428733
FKP 0.833425
GBP 0.837027
GEL 2.982193
GGP 0.833425
GHS 17.466521
GIP 0.833425
GMD 74.417331
GNF 9449.857628
GTQ 8.467078
GYD 229.098109
HKD 8.504198
HNL 27.173552
HRK 7.440612
HTG 144.274031
HUF 401.168058
IDR 17056.800802
ILS 4.10868
IMP 0.833425
INR 92.056607
IQD 1433.620496
IRR 46061.898613
ISK 149.494677
JEP 0.833425
JMD 173.364739
JOD 0.775473
JPY 163.124677
KES 141.1737
KGS 93.572518
KHR 4452.978856
KMF 494.052308
KPW 984.929491
KRW 1478.603118
KWD 0.335468
KYD 0.912502
KZT 530.176067
LAK 23933.802098
LBP 98000.546503
LKR 320.534008
LRD 211.107482
LSL 19.239386
LTL 3.231381
LVL 0.661972
LYD 5.257078
MAD 10.728629
MDL 19.326462
MGA 5012.200281
MKD 61.693534
MMK 3554.460648
MNT 3718.658306
MOP 8.764587
MRU 43.501494
MUR 50.454403
MVR 16.809888
MWK 1898.72676
MXN 21.134197
MYR 4.692102
MZN 69.902721
NAD 19.239381
NGN 1773.425461
NIO 40.305941
NOK 11.698152
NPR 147.248686
NZD 1.789351
OMR 0.421268
PAB 1.095043
PEN 4.12522
PGK 4.301998
PHP 62.673334
PKR 303.851349
PLN 4.289431
PYG 8546.376701
QAR 3.984631
RON 4.973939
RSD 117.023003
RUB 104.841819
RWF 1479.036718
SAR 4.107601
SBD 9.044971
SCR 14.869891
SDG 658.265647
SEK 11.339107
SGD 1.42741
SHP 0.833425
SLE 25.003329
SLL 22948.318794
SOS 624.883808
SRD 34.961193
STD 22651.183053
SVC 9.581974
SYP 2749.629323
SZL 19.239372
THB 36.289607
TJS 11.672999
TMT 3.830284
TND 3.360842
TOP 2.563121
TRY 37.522949
TTD 7.432792
TWD 35.243321
TZS 2982.149872
UAH 45.092556
UGX 4024.412347
USD 1.094367
UYU 45.792003
UZS 13996.951621
VEF 3964401.191824
VES 41.150804
VND 27162.183749
VUV 129.925424
WST 3.06145
XAF 656.822341
XAG 0.034711
XAU 0.000412
XCD 2.957581
XDR 0.814596
XOF 656.076826
XPF 119.331742
YER 274.033374
ZAR 19.020646
ZMK 9850.618283
ZMW 28.935915
ZWL 352.38566
  • RBGPF

    -0.6100

    59.49

    -1.03%

  • RYCEF

    0.1200

    7

    +1.71%

  • CMSC

    0.1100

    24.7

    +0.45%

  • NGG

    0.5900

    66.27

    +0.89%

  • BCC

    2.6250

    141.575

    +1.85%

  • SCS

    0.2950

    12.895

    +2.29%

  • BCE

    0.2300

    33.09

    +0.7%

  • RIO

    0.4450

    67.285

    +0.66%

  • CMSD

    0.1020

    24.872

    +0.41%

  • JRI

    0.0400

    13.26

    +0.3%

  • RELX

    0.4590

    46.819

    +0.98%

  • VOD

    -0.0950

    9.645

    -0.98%

  • BTI

    0.1090

    35.219

    +0.31%

  • AZN

    0.2900

    77.16

    +0.38%

  • BP

    -0.1350

    32.205

    -0.42%

  • GSK

    -0.4450

    38.765

    -1.15%

'Party atmosphere': Skygazers treated to another aurora show
'Party atmosphere': Skygazers treated to another aurora show / Photo: Sanka Vidanagama - AFP

'Party atmosphere': Skygazers treated to another aurora show

Scientist Jim Wild has travelled to the Arctic Circle numerous times to study the northern lights, but on Thursday night he only needed to look out of his bedroom window in the English city of Lancaster.

Text size:

For at least the second time this year, skygazers in many parts of the world were treated to colourful auroras at latitudes beyond the polar extremes where they normally light up the skies.

The dazzling celestial shows were caused by a gigantic ball of plasma -- and an accompanying magnetic field -- which erupted from the Sun earlier this week.

When this eruption, called a coronal mass ejection (CME), arrived at Earth at around 1600 GMT on Thursday, it triggered a strong geomagnetic storm.

This storm in turn sparked northern and southern lights -- aurora borealis and aurora australis -- in swathes of Europe, the United States, Australia and elsewhere.

While Wild could see the shimmering reds and greens from his back garden, he jumped in the car with his family to get a better look away from the bright lights of Lancaster.

"All the little back roads and parking spots were full of people with flasks of coffee and deck chairs looking at the northern lights," he told AFP.

"It was a party atmosphere," he said, comparing the scenes to UFO spotters looking up at the sky in the movie "Close Encounters of the Third Kind".

While Wild was explaining the phenomenon to his 11- and 13-year-old children, another nearby skygazer approached and asked how come he knew so much about it.

"Well, actually, this is what I study for a living," responded the professor in space physics at Lancaster University, who specialises in how solar weather disrupts power grids and transport here on Earth.

- 'Perfect hit' -

Auroras were also visible across northern Europe, including near London and Berlin, and as far south in the US as the state of Virginia. In the Southern Hemisphere, areas of Australia and New Zealand were also treated to a show, AFP photos showed.

The CME that triggered Thursday's auroras erupted from a spot on the Sun pointed directly at Earth, said Juha-Pekka Luntama, the head of the European Space Agency's Space Weather Office.

"It was a perfect hit," he told AFP.

The CME caused a "severe" geomagnetic storm given a rating of G4. This fell narrowly short of the highest level of G5, which was seen in May, when auroras delighted many skygazers across swathes of the world.

Storms on the Sun have been intensifying as solar activity approaches -- or may have already reached -- the peak of its 11-year cycle.

While such storms offer pretty light shows for skygazers, they can pose a serious threat to satellites, GPS services, power grids and even astronauts in space.

The US Space Weather Prediction Center warned on Thursday that the geomagnetic storm could disrupt emergencies services already stretched thin by deadly hurricanes Helene and Milton.

Luntama said the European Space Agency had not received any information about disruptions caused by the latest storm, but sometimes this can take days.

The storm is "gradually dissipating", he added, which means that any auroras on Friday night or over the weekend will likely be farther north in Europe, such as central Sweden.

- 'Delighted' -

But for those still hoping to see an aurora, there could be some more chances in the next couple of years.

Luntama explained that during past solar cycles, the biggest eruptions have come in the two years after the Sun passed its peak.

Wild also did not expect a repeat of Thursday's "magical" display.

But space weather -- like Earth's weather -- is not an "exact art," he emphasised.

And if there is an aurora lighting up the sky nearby, it is worth seeking out.

Wild said his neighbours had travelled to Norway twice to see the northern lights -- but had been foiled by clouds both times.

Then on Thursday night, they saw an aurora from their garden.

"They were really delighted to finally have seen it," Wild said.

A.Hussain--DT