Yes, "Northern Lights" is the original British title, and "The Golden Compass" is the American title.
The novel, Northern Lights, known in some countries as The Golden Compass, was published by Scholastic UK in 1995.
The Aurora Borealis (the 'Northern Lights' of the title) and the mysterious elementary particles called Dust.
Philip Pullman wrote Northern Lights (novel).
Other than impressing them with their beauty and inspiring them to awe - the northern lights really don't have any effect on people. The solar radiation that causes the northern lights can interfere with radio transmissions so that is an effect related to, but not cause by, the northern lights.
No, the Northern Lights and The Golden Compass are not the same. The Northern Lights, also known as the aurora borealis, are a natural light display in the Earth's sky, typically seen in high-latitude regions. The Golden Compass is a fantasy novel by Philip Pullman, which is the first book in the His Dark Materials trilogy. The title of the book in some countries is "Northern Lights," which is where the confusion may arise, but they are distinct concepts.
If you mean the Nothern Lights series of books by Philip Pullman, the film was called the Golden Compass.
Northern lights have an iridescent effect.
It is a magical film as it follows the first novel of Phillip Pullman's Northern Lights trilogy.
The trilogy "His Dark Materials" was written by Phillip Pullman. the trilogy consists of the books "Northern Lights", "The Subtle Knife" and "The Amber Spyglass".
The northern lights cause humans to speak phrases. Examples include "Wow!", "Cool!", "Awesome!", "Holy cow!", ""Wudja look at that!", and "Cheese!". The effect is most noticeable among tourists and other temporary visitors to the polar regions. Permanent residents are essentially immune to the influence.
the northern lights are ,i am pretty sure,located in the northern hemisphere in Alaska