It is very rare to see the northern lights in Washington DC due to its southern latitude. The northern lights are typically visible in regions much closer to the Earth's magnetic poles, such as Alaska and northern Canada.
The solar winds from the sun are emitted towards the Earth, however, because of the Earth's magnetic field the winds are refracted away from the Earth. At the point where the magnetic field is at its lowest force, the winds can enter the Earth's surface and form an array of lights and colours which are the gases. The fact they are at either ends of the poles is the reason why they are called the Northern and Southern Lights. EASY: They are "lights" and the lights are in the "north", ergo the name, The Northern Lights.
You don't often see auroras near the equator because the lights occur above the magnetic poles, so the Northern Lights are more often seen from northern latitudes in Canada, Greenland, Iceland, Northern Europe and Russia, and Alaska in the US. If the aurora is very spectacular it can be seen closer to the equator, but hugely spectacular auroras don't occur very often.
The Northern Lights, also known as the Aurora Borealis, are only visible in the northern hemisphere because they are caused by solar particles interacting with the Earth's magnetic field near the North Pole. This phenomenon creates the colorful light display that can be seen in the night sky in northern regions.
No, the northern lights or aurora borealis is a natural phenomenon caused by the interaction between charged particles from the Sun and the Earth's magnetic field. It is a display of lights in the sky and not a gateway to another world.
No. The Northern and Southern lights, called aurora, are the result of Earth's magnetic field funneling high-energy particles from the sun toward the poles. Mars does not have a magnetic field and so does not have aurora.
It is very rare to see the northern lights in Washington DC due to its southern latitude. The northern lights are typically visible in regions much closer to the Earth's magnetic poles, such as Alaska and northern Canada.
The solar winds from the sun are emitted towards the Earth, however, because of the Earth's magnetic field the winds are refracted away from the Earth. At the point where the magnetic field is at its lowest force, the winds can enter the Earth's surface and form an array of lights and colours which are the gases. The fact they are at either ends of the poles is the reason why they are called the Northern and Southern Lights. EASY: They are "lights" and the lights are in the "north", ergo the name, The Northern Lights.
The Northern and Southern lights, respectively.
You don't often see auroras near the equator because the lights occur above the magnetic poles, so the Northern Lights are more often seen from northern latitudes in Canada, Greenland, Iceland, Northern Europe and Russia, and Alaska in the US. If the aurora is very spectacular it can be seen closer to the equator, but hugely spectacular auroras don't occur very often.
The Northern Lights, also known as the Aurora Borealis, are only visible in the northern hemisphere because they are caused by solar particles interacting with the Earth's magnetic field near the North Pole. This phenomenon creates the colorful light display that can be seen in the night sky in northern regions.
No, the northern lights or aurora borealis is a natural phenomenon caused by the interaction between charged particles from the Sun and the Earth's magnetic field. It is a display of lights in the sky and not a gateway to another world.
To start if we didnt have a magnetic field we would be fried by the suns radiation. The northern lights are evidence that we have a magnetic field surrounding earth.
the northern lights are caused by magnetic energy being shot out of the passing through the earths atmosphere it also happen in the southern hemisphere because the atmosphere is weaker in these parts
The magnetic field, this also produces the northern and southern lights.
Northern lights, or auroras, are caused by the collision of energetic charged particles with atoms in the high altitude atmosphere. The charged particles originate in the magnetosphere and solar wind and are directed by the Earth's magnetic field into the atmosphere.
The Aurorae Borealis/Australis (the Northern and Southern Lights) are caused by the bending of Earth's magnetic fields at the North and South Magnetic Poles which permits solar wind to enter the atmosphere and interact with atmospheric gasses. Thus, the only way that the Aurorae would be visible at the Equator is if a) the entire magnetic field suddenly lapsed or b) a point within the tropics suddenly became a North/South Magnetic Pole.