Credit & Copyright: Davide Necchi
Explanation:
What's happened to the sky?
Aurora!
Captured late last month, this
aurora was noted by
Icelanders for its great brightness
and quick development.
The aurora resulted from a solar storm,
with high energy particles bursting out from the Sun and through a
crack in Earth's protective
magnetosphere
a few days later.
Although a spiral pattern can be discerned,
creative humans might imagine the complex glow as an atmospheric
apparition of any number
of
common
icons.
In the foreground of the featured image is the
ælfusÀ River,
while the lights illuminate a bridge in
Selfoss City.
Just beyond the low clouds is a nearly full Moon.
The liveliness of the Sun -- and the
resulting auroras on Earth -- is slowly diminishing as
the Sun emerges from a
Solar maximum
of surface activity and
evolves towards
a historically more quite period in its 11-year cycle.
In fact, solar astronomers are
waiting to
see if the
coming
Solar
minimum will be as unusually quiet as the
last one, where sometimes months would go by with
no discernible sunspots or other active solar phenomena.
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NASA Web Site Statements, Warnings, and Disclaimers
NASA Official: Jay Norris. Specific rights apply.
A service of: LHEA at NASA / GSFC
& Michigan Tech. U.
Based on Astronomy Picture
Of the Day
Publications with keywords: aurora
Publications with words: aurora
See also:
- APOD: 2024 May 12 Á Red Aurora over Poland
- APOD: 2024 January 14 Á Dragon Aurora over Iceland
- APOD: 2024 January 3 Á A SAR Arc from New Zealand
- APOD: 2023 December 12 Á Aurora and Milky Way over Norway
- The SAR and the Milky Way
- APOD: 2023 November 5 Á Creature Aurora Over Norway
- APOD: 2023 October 22 Á Ghost Aurora over Canada