these lights occur in Mexico sometimes they happen in some parts of the United States of America
And don't forget Canada!
+++
Hear Hear! They don't occur IN ANY country, but are seen FROM countries, ships at sea or aircraft, all at high latitudes North and South. They occur in the upper atmosphere right round the Earth around the Magnetic Poles.
Countries of south America , Antarctica and Australia can see the polar lights.We can see them mostly at polar regions,where the collision of charged particles are directed by the Earth's magnetic field.
in the summer
The Northern Lights occur in the ionosphere, the highest level of the atmosphere, so all the others layer usually do NOT contain the Northern Lights.
Aurora Borealis, the Northern Lights.
The aurora borealis night-sky displays are also known as the northern lights, or the northern polar lights.(or the southern (polar) lights, depending on where you live)In the Southern Hemisphere this phenomenon is also known as the aurora australis.
The northern lights don't happen on a fixed schedule; we generally can't predict when they are likely to occur. However, the great-circle route from Denver to London does cross some pretty high latitudes, so there's a good chance that they will be visible.
The Southern (or Northern) Lights are caused by particles ejected from the sun by solar flares, getting trapped in the ionosphere and radiating. They happen all the time, but the conditions have to be right for them to be visible.
The Northern Lights occur in space, and are visible from many countries north of the Equator: the farther north, the higher your chances of seeing them.
The Northern Lights occur in the northern hemisphere, in the ionosphere, the highest level of the atmosphere.
No they never occur in the Troposphere(:
The Northern Lights occur in the ionosphere, the highest level of the atmosphere, so all the others layer usually do NOT contain the Northern Lights.
The arctic tundra gets the northern lights, or aurora borealis. The southern lights, or aurora australis, occur in high southern latitudes.
You can have a meteor on any day and the northern lights can occur on any day, so it is hard to predict when both will happen on the same day.You can have a meteor on any day and the northern lights can occur on any day, so it is hard to predict when both will happen on the same day.You can have a meteor on any day and the northern lights can occur on any day, so it is hard to predict when both will happen on the same day.You can have a meteor on any day and the northern lights can occur on any day, so it is hard to predict when both will happen on the same day.You can have a meteor on any day and the northern lights can occur on any day, so it is hard to predict when both will happen on the same day.You can have a meteor on any day and the northern lights can occur on any day, so it is hard to predict when both will happen on the same day.You can have a meteor on any day and the northern lights can occur on any day, so it is hard to predict when both will happen on the same day.You can have a meteor on any day and the northern lights can occur on any day, so it is hard to predict when both will happen on the same day.You can have a meteor on any day and the northern lights can occur on any day, so it is hard to predict when both will happen on the same day.You can have a meteor on any day and the northern lights can occur on any day, so it is hard to predict when both will happen on the same day.You can have a meteor on any day and the northern lights can occur on any day, so it is hard to predict when both will happen on the same day.
The novel, Northern Lights, known in some countries as The Golden Compass, was published by Scholastic UK in 1995.
Antartica, alaska, parts of USA, canada
They do not occur in South Dakota.
In the upper atmosphere usually in latitudes above 50 degrees.
The dancing lights of the ionosphere are known as auroras. In the Northern Hemisphere they are called the Aurora Borealis or Northern Lights. In the Southern Hemisphere they are known as the Aurora Australialis or Southern Lights.
Aurora Borealis, the Northern Lights.