The nearer you can get to the north or south magnetic pole, the more likely you are to see them, but they are never guaranteed. You can access forecasts on the internet.
In the north and south poles.
Auroras occur in the mesospere.
The Arctic and the Antarctic regions.
The Arctic and the Antarctic regions.
Yes, frequently. The display of the aurora borealis isn't connected to the seasons. However, while auroras often OCCUR during the daytime, the faint light is difficult to SEE against the bright background of the sunlit sky. So we more often see auroras at night. And since auroras are usually high-latitude events, and the summer days are quite long at high latitudes, it makes sense that we will more often see auroras in the long winter nights - because the nights are longer!
Auroras appears in the night sky by atoms and molecules. Auroras is lights in the sky.
See the Related Link for AuroraWatch, just subscribe and they will email you when Auroras are likely.
because they make people see things not yet thought of before.
The auroras we see on Earth are a result of Earth's magnetic field funneling high-energy particles from the sun into Earth's upper atmosphere, where excited electrons in gas molecules create a glow. The moon has no magnetic field and no atmosphere.
It would be quite unusual to see auroras as far south as Kentucky, but it has happened; at the peak of the last sunspot cycle, there were auroras in Florida!
The Auroras of Autumn was created in 1950-09.
Auroras are usually confined to arctic (and antarctic) regions near the magnetic poles. The Philippines is a tropical nation. It would be extremely unusual for auroras to be visible in the Philippines.