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Solar Storm Brings Dazzling Northern Lights (PHOTO)

Northern Lights

AP/The Huffington Post   First Posted: 01/24/2012 9:12 am Updated: 01/25/2012 9:55 am

By KARL RITTER and SETH BORENSTEIN, The Associated Press

STOCKHOLM -- A storm from the broiling sun turned the chilly northernmost skies of Earth into an ever-changing and awe-provoking art show of northern lights on Tuesday.

Even experienced stargazers were stunned by the intensity of the aurora borealis that swept across the night sky in northern Scandinavia after the biggest solar flare in six years.

"It has been absolutely incredible," British astronomer John Mason cried from the deck of the MS Midnatsol, a cruise ship plying the fjord-fringed coast of northern Norway.

"I saw my first aurora 40 years ago, and this is one of the best," Mason told The Associated Press, his voice nearly drowning in the cheers of awe-struck fellow passengers.

U.S. space weather experts from the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration said Tuesday evening that so far they had heard of no problems from the storm that triggered the auroras, which made it as far south as Wales, where the weather often doesn't cooperate with good viewing.

It was part of the strongest solar storm in years, but the sun is likely to get even more active in the next few months and years, said physicist Doug Biesecker at the U.S. Space Weather Prediction Center in Boulder, Colorado.

"To me this was a wake up call. The sun is reminding us that solar max is approaching," Biesecker said. "A lot worse is in store for us. We hope that you guys are paying attention. I would say we passed with flying colors."

Even before particles from the solar storm reached the Earth on Tuesday, a different aurora Monday night was dancing across the sky as far south as Ireland and England, where people rarely get a chance to catch the stunning light show.

Those northern lights were likely just variations in normal background solar wind, not the solar storm that erupted Sunday, Biesecker said.

Tuesday's colorful display may not have moved that far south, limiting its audience, but those who got to see it got brilliance in the sky that had not been around for years.

"It was the biggest northern lights I've seen in the five-six years that I've worked here," said Andreas Hermansson, a tour guide at the Ice Hotel in the Swedish town of Jukkasjarvi, above the Arctic Circle.

He was leading a group of tourists on a bus tour in the area when a green glow that had lingered in the sky for much of the evening virtually exploded into a spectacle of colors around 10:15 p.m.

"We stopped the bus. And suddenly it was just this gigantic display of dancing lights and Technicolor," said Michele Cahill, an Irish psychologist, who was on the tour. "It was an absolutely awesome display. It went on for over an hour. Literally one would have to lie on the ground to capture it all."

But in -30 degrees F (-35 C), that didn't seem like a good idea.

An aurora appears when a magnetic solar wind slams into the Earth's magnetic field, exciting electrons of oxygen and nitrogen.

The northern lights are sometimes seen from northern Scotland, but they were also visible Monday night from northeast England and Ireland, where such sightings are a rarity.

"The lights appear as green and red mist. It's been mostly green the past few nights. I don't know if that's just special for Ireland," said Gerard O'Kane, a 41-year-old taxi driver and vice chairman of the Buncrana Camera Club in County Donegal in Ireland's northwest corner.

He and at least two dozen amateur photographers were meeting after dark at a local beach for an all-night stakeout. They've been shooting the horizon from dozens of locations since Friday night.

Scientists have been expecting solar eruptions to become more intense as the sun enters a more active phase of its 11-year cycle, with an expected peak in 2013.

But in recent years the sun appeared quieter than normal, leading scientists to speculate that it was going into an unusually quiet cycle that seems to happen once a century or so.

While the geomagnetic part of the solar eruption - which happened around 11 p.m. EST Sunday - was more of a fizzle, another earlier part of the sun's outburst was more powerful.

On Monday and Tuesday, the proton radiation from the eruption reached strong levels, the most powerful since October 2003. That mostly affects astronauts and satellites, but NASA said the crew on the International Space Station was not harmed and only a few minor problems with satellites were reported, Biesecker said.

However, some airplane flights over the North Pole have been rerouted because of expected communication problems from the radiation.

Geomagnetic storms cause awesome sights, but they can also bring trouble. According to the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, problems can include current surges in power lines, and interference in the broadcast of radio, TV and telephone signals. No such problems were reported Tuesday.

Peter Richardson, a 49-year-old bar manager and part-time poet at the 17th-century Tan Hill Inn in northern England, said the pub - normally dead on a Monday night in January - was thronged until the wee hours of the morning with people who came to look at the lights.

"I just thought: 'Oh my God, this is just absolutely amazing,'" he said. "You do get a lot of spectacular skylines out here, but that was just something out of the ordinary. Very different."

Ken Kennedy, director of the Aurora section of the British Astronomical Association, said the northern lights may be visible for a few more days.

The Canadian Space Agency posted a geomagnetic storm warning Tuesday after residents were also treated to a spectacular show in the night sky.

John Manuel, a scientist with the Canadian Space Agency, said there's an increased chance of seeing northern lights over northern Canada on Tuesday night.

"It's not likely people in the major Canadian cities further south will see a significant aurora tonight," he said. "There's always a possibility but the current forecast is for a good show for people who live further north. It should be a particularly good night tonight."

___

AP Science Writer Borenstein reported from Washington. AP writers Louise Nordstrom in Stockholm, Shawn Pogatchnik in Dublin, Raphael Satter in London and Rob Gillies in Toronto contributed to this report.

(Photos of some of the best auroras of 2011 can be found below.)

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By KARL RITTER and SETH BORENSTEIN, The Associated Press STOCKHOLM -- A storm from the broiling sun turned the chilly northernmost skies of Earth into an ever-changing and awe-provoking art show of...
By KARL RITTER and SETH BORENSTEIN, The Associated Press STOCKHOLM -- A storm from the broiling sun turned the chilly northernmost skies of Earth into an ever-changing and awe-provoking art show of...
 
 
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04:58 AM on 01/30/2012
Quick scan of the comments and it seems no-one wants to mention the co-incidence that is an upswing in solar activity just a few months before the end of the Mayan long term calender. The Mayans were sun worshipers and we do not fully comprehend all that they knew about the sun and its cycles, especially considering as a race they spent considerable resources studying the sun. Add to this the celestial alignment with the galactic center and you have a confluence of events that, in my opinion, only a fool ignores completely.
It was little over a century ago an x class solar flare had all the telegraph switches buzzing. The operators had no idea what was going on. A similar sized flare today could fry our electrical infrastructure to the point of causing massive power outages, blowing up transformers and then the real threat in such a scenario is meltdowns occurring at nuclear facilities unable to keep pumps running. Back-up systems are generally diesel generaters, but they require the constant flow of fuel which isn't going to happen if the electrical infrastructure is out and most nuclear plants only have fuel for a couple of days.
Dismiss concerns such as these as conspiracies if you must(some of you will), though you do so at your own risk. If the taps no longer flow because there is no power for the pumps where are you going to get fresh drinking water?
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Jim NLN
Hillary-Frank 2016
11:32 AM on 01/30/2012
Please contact Glenn Beck for all of your survival needs............
02:10 PM on 01/30/2012
lol
12:01 PM on 01/26/2012
All I know is people need to get prayed up, because things are not right. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Fusq5yrQ0jw&list=UUgm2Pr7FTSaoH6_2vlm7fqA&index=2&feature=plpp_video
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tc71087
12:02 AM on 01/26/2012
The Earth has survived solar storms before, we will survive the next couple. 2012 conspiracy theories are made by people who have trouble sleeping and therefore, cannot think logically.
05:09 AM on 01/30/2012
So it is a "conspiracy" that the Mayan long term calender ends at a time when the suns solar flare activity is peaking? Your denial is typical of the arrogant. Our electrical infrastructure is a fragile thing and could easily be wiped out by an x class solar flare. Dismiss it as "conspiracy", if you want but I at least know where I am going to get clean drinking water if the grid ever does go down. Do you?
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tc71087
05:42 PM on 01/30/2012
Several descents of Mayans have stated that that "prediction" has no weight or substance. It is a Western invention, born out of economic uncertainity. It happened in 1844. It happened in 1929. It happened in 1960, when coincidentally, America voted for its first Catholic president. It happened in 1999 with Y2K- and guess what? Nothing happened. Nothing will happen on December 21st of this year. Has it ever occurred to you to 1)get some sleep and 2)that the Mayans just ran out of room on their stone tablet?
09:25 PM on 01/25/2012
I've seen them a couple times in my life while living in central MN. Awesome site to see.
07:48 PM on 01/25/2012
The sky looks like the movie maximum overdrive when machinery takes over the world....Uh oh WHAT IF THAT HAPPENS TOMORROW! whatever you do stay underground they cant attack you there!
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catb50
dream a little dream...
07:09 PM on 01/25/2012
soooo cool! i saw them 25+ years ago driving around Lake MI on the Canadian side. totally freaked cause i had no idea what they were, and it didn't help that the guy i was with played me with a "we're being invaded!" line, which i was naive enough to fall for!! today, i would give anything to see them again, in person, now that i know and appreciate the phenom of them!!
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06:10 PM on 01/25/2012
Many years ago my family was camping six miles west of Crivitz WI, and I saw an unbelievalbe show. At night I always spent time at the very small boat landing area where there was a small river. This place was mostly 'treed in', but I would lay on the ground to marvel at the stars above. The NL started with a bang and grew to fill the entire sky. They were swirling up and down, like pulsing lines. The colors were intense, red, blue, green, white. They all collected at the top of the sky, where the pulses stopped abruptly around a circular opening where I could see the stars. It lasted at least an hour and stayed intense. Absolutely the best I've ever seen.
photo
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Canefighter
I post my thoughts on subjects, not opinions.
03:56 PM on 01/25/2012
I have seen them in the past when in Alaska on a hunting trip. Amazing thing to see.
03:22 PM on 01/25/2012
interesting!!!!
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03:08 PM on 01/25/2012
Crank up the Pink Floyd !
photo
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aprilglaspie
09:27 AM on 01/26/2012
Fire up a bomber.
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idontcare761
It seems I might care afterall..
02:43 PM on 01/25/2012
Nothing scientific to say here , just that I thought the green lights were absolutely beautiful. I would love the chance to see those lights in person , but living in central Florida , I doubt I ever will. Thank you for the pictures.
01:54 PM on 01/25/2012
Stationed in Ottawa in the early 90s I saw this fantastic sight. The colors and the movement felt like someone moving curtains, truly fascinating.
I also look at the Hubble telescope website gallery/pictures section for those of you who like to look at pictures of the universe you've never seen anywhere else.
fd909
Laugh a little!
01:34 PM on 01/25/2012
Green lights over Ireland! Gotta love it.
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ccairnes
"Pessimism of the intellect, optimism of the will"
12:25 PM on 01/25/2012
Yo, Lauren ... Administration, not Association. It's the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration.
photo
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aprilglaspie
09:29 AM on 01/26/2012
And fortunnately, it survived W and the Teabangers so far.
12:24 PM on 01/25/2012
The good news is one good blast & the postings from both ultra libby & ultra conservz idiots will stop,,, then we will see how dead on or wrong The Mayens were , considering the way things have deteraited in society today I'm kinda hopen they were right!