The rarest color for an Aurora Borealis is purple and orange in the aurora australis
There are pink auroras too! the green wavelength (557.7 nm) is from oxygen; nitrogen gives pink 630.0 nm).
Auroras appears in the night sky by atoms and molecules. Auroras is lights in the sky.
the Auroras form in the earths poles which is south pole and north pole.
Auroras are produced by interactions among thermospheric gases and free electrons
The rarest color for an Aurora Borealis is purple and orange in the aurora australis
There are pink auroras too! the green wavelength (557.7 nm) is from oxygen; nitrogen gives pink 630.0 nm).
well i think it would be red, maybe green. Even yellow at times.Improving the answerBy: hulk789The sky is blue due the sunlight being filtered through atmospheric gases. The only places where the sky will turn red, green, yellow, or any other sort of colors for that matter is at the 2 magnetic poles, the north magnetic pole and the south magnetic poles. The color change are the characteristics auroras, a natural electrical phenomenon. Which means auroras cause the color change in the sky.
Auroras occur in the mesospere.
Auroras appears in the night sky by atoms and molecules. Auroras is lights in the sky.
The Auroras of Autumn was created in 1950-09.
Sun dogs are formed differently to auroras
auroras are the northern lights, and that is a very important event in Alaska
A planet needs to have a magnetic field in order to have auroras.
Which can cause auroras and disrupt satellite transmission?
the Auroras form in the earths poles which is south pole and north pole.
Auroras are produced by interactions among thermospheric gases and free electrons