No they're in the Arctic that is why they're the NORTHERNlights
They'd be the Southern Lights, not northern.
People do talk about them. You probably live in the northern hemisphere, so the Northern Lights are more relevant there. In the southern hemisphere, people would be talking about the Southern Lights, as that is what they might be able to see. Where they are, they would not be talking about the Northern Lights.
The northern lights are in the northern hemisphere hence nearer the north pole.
the northern lights
Northern Lights
They'd be the Southern Lights, not northern.
There are no northern lights in Antarctica. However, the southern lights -- Aurora Australis -- are visible from the continent.
Antarctica. (excluding the northern lights)
The Southern Lights- like the Northern Lights, but in the South.
Antarctica has no land in the northern hemisphere.
Antarctica does not get the "Northern Lights (Aurora Borealis)", being at the South Pole, it gets the "Southern Lights" or the Aurora Australis. The source of both the Aurora Australis and Aurora Borealis is the sun. A stream of particles known as the "Solar Wind" spills around the edges of the Earth's magnetic sphere and, when it collides with gases in the ionosphere, the particles glow very spectacularly.
Aurora are generated when magnetic storms from the sun hit the earth's atmosphere and interact with it. Both polar regions experience aurora: Aurora Australis occurs in the Southern Hemisphere, and Aurora Borealis occurs in the Northern Hemisphere.
Antarctica does not exist in the northern hemisphere.
Asia, Australia, and Antarctica are not in the Northern and Western Hemispheres (together). Separately, Asia is a part of the Northern while Antarctica is a part of the Western.
People do talk about them. You probably live in the northern hemisphere, so the Northern Lights are more relevant there. In the southern hemisphere, people would be talking about the Southern Lights, as that is what they might be able to see. Where they are, they would not be talking about the Northern Lights.
The primary reason is that there are no city lights to contend with. Another reason is that the stars visible there are less familiar to northern hemisphere observers. Antarctica is a desert with very little moisture in the atmosphere to distort viewing.
the northern lights are ,i am pretty sure,located in the northern hemisphere in Alaska