Ensnared particles racing from deep in Earth's magnetic field strike molecules in Earth's atmosphere, and make them glow - that's the aurorae.
Mussaenda Philippica 'Aurorae'.
The cast of Lux Aurorae - 2012 includes: Lory Cox as Nurse Jim Dailey as Dr. Dawkins Jackie Goldston as Dawn Alexandra Goldston as Simone Jeremy Madden as Caregiver
Water is a polar molecule (H2O)
No. The moon, planets and any aurorae, meteors, or comets that might be visible are not stars
The word may be one of these:areas - regionserase - remove, deletearouse - stimulateauroras / aurorae - halos of light, e.g. the "polar lights"
Not particularly... the aurorae borealis is always there in all colors, only it's usually too faint to see.
Latin has several different terms meaning "dawn". You could say:aurora novaprima lux novadiliculum novum
Yes. There is energy eberywhere. Jupiter gets light from the sun and produces light in its aurorae. There is thermal energy as it is not absolute zero, and there is kinetic energy from Jupiter's winds.
The aurorae are best visible from the Arctic and Antarctic Circles - and/or locations close to them. It's very rare to see the aurorae near the equator or latitudes as far south(or north) as say, Los Angeles.
Definitely! Auroras are generally seen in high latitudes only (about 50 to 90 degrees, both North and South). So people in northern Canada, Alaska, and Greenland can see them.
lightning. aurorae. the excited low-pressure gas inside neon signs and fluorescent lights. solar wind. welding arcs. the Earth's ionosphere. stars (including the Sun) the tail of a comet.