Sun dogs are formed differently to auroras
no dogs do not bark different in china, dogs have the same bark language but they just have different pitch, which depends on the size of the dog and what type it is.
because dogs need to use them more and dogs are different to humans so their teeth are different.
Well, there are many different dogs out there. There are maybe somewhere around 5000+ different dog breeds dog breeds will never stop as long as different dogs breed to make different and amazing breeds!
yes Lassie was played by 6 different dogs and they were all males.
no, they are different.
Magnetic storms unleashed by solar flares can cause auroras, but all solar flares don't cause auroras.
Solar winds are the out-of-this-world event that cause auroras to appear on earth. Auroras can happen near both the north and the south poles.
When the sun sends off a solar flare, the flare eventually reaches the earth's atmosphere, (after about 16 and a half hours). This then charges the particles in the atmosphere. The Earth's magnetic field then channels the particles to the north and south poles. They then react with the gases in the iosphere. Create moving, colourful lights, or auroras. So by studying the sun, which is related to auroras, we can improve our understanding of the sun.
the sun, lightning bolts and auroras contain plasma
Not quite but they would affect the auroras. The physical, light-emitting reaction is that between charged particles from the Sun and the field.
The auroras are primarily the result of charged subatomic particles from the sun, and their deflection toward the poles by the Earth's magnetic field. The swarm of particles is often called, picturesquely, the 'solar wind'.
Auroras have no definite size. They occur when charged particles from the Sun ionize particles in the upper atmosphere as they spiral in toward Earth's magnetic field. Auroras may be localized in one area, or may extend from horizon to horizon in the sky.
They are two different entities.
The Auroras is collision that occurs during the Northern lights when active sun particles hit the earth's atmosphere. Auroras can be seen every year in the north and south pole hemisphere in an array of colors including pink, light green, yellow and blue.
The electrons that form the auroras enter the magnetosphere along the invisible magnetic field lines. The source of these charge particles comes from the sun in the form of Solar winds.
Auroras occur in the mesospere.
When the sun sends off a solar flare, the flare eventually reaches the earth's atmosphere, (after about 16 and a half hours). This then charges the particles in the atmosphere. The Earth's magnetic field then channels the particles to the north and south poles. They then react with the gases in the iosphere. Create moving, colourful lights, or auroras. So by studying the sun, which is related to auroras, we can improve our understanding of the sun.