Aurora Borealis occurs in northern parts of the world. Aurora Australis in southern parts of the world. Borealis is more known because there are more places and people to see them.
Aurora Borealis for the northern ones, and Aurora Australis for the southern ones.
Aurora Borealis is the real name for the Northern Lights. It is a natural light display in the sky in high latitude regions.
NO!!!! However, you can see the 'Aurora Australis' in the Souther Hemisphere. The words from their Latin roots. Aurora ' Dawn/Light Borealis ' Northern Australis ; Southern . NB Oriental ; Eastern Occidental ; Western.
bit of a silly question really as you put the question under the heading which is your answer. Aurora Borealis and Aurora Australis
The Northern Lights. Borealis is "north" and aurora is similar to "lights" so "northern lights". There is such thing as Aurora Australis that occurs in the south.
Aurora Borealis for the northern ones, and Aurora Australis for the southern ones.
The Aurora Borealis is in the northen hemisphere at the north pole. However the Aurora Australis is in the southern hemisphere at the south pole. That is the only difference in them; they are both formed in the same way. They are both polar lights. One is the Aurora Borealis, the northern lights and the Aurora Australis, the southern lights. They are on the different poles on the earth, other than that, they are the same. Borealis is near the North Pole. Australis is near the South pole. The Aurora Borealis is at the north magnetic pole: the Aurora Australis is at the south magnetic pole. That's the only difference. They are both really the same thing but are visible from different places in the world. The aurora borealis can be seen in Northern England and in Scotland sometime, normally in summer and spring. The aurora austalis can be seen from places like Australia and New Zealand. Another difference is that the aurora borealis are brighter that the aurora austalis
Aurora Borealis is the real name for the Northern Lights. It is a natural light display in the sky in high latitude regions.
NO!!!! However, you can see the 'Aurora Australis' in the Souther Hemisphere. The words from their Latin roots. Aurora ' Dawn/Light Borealis ' Northern Australis ; Southern . NB Oriental ; Eastern Occidental ; Western.
Aurora Borealis which is the "northern lights" and Aurora Australis which occurs in Australia
Aurora Borealis and Aurora Australis.
In the north, you can see aurora borealis and in the south you can see aurora australis.
bit of a silly question really as you put the question under the heading which is your answer. Aurora Borealis and Aurora Australis
They differ only in their location. Borealis = northern hemisphere, Australis = southern hemisphere. Both are caused by incoming energetic particles from our Sun exciting the air molecules.
The Northern Lights. Borealis is "north" and aurora is similar to "lights" so "northern lights". There is such thing as Aurora Australis that occurs in the south.
An aurora borealis, also known as the Northern Lights, occurs near the North Pole and is visible in the Northern Hemisphere. An aurora australis, or the Southern Lights, occurs near the South Pole and is visible in the Southern Hemisphere. Both are caused by solar particles interacting with the Earth's magnetic field.
Aurora Borealis was named after the Roman Goddess of dawn, Aurora, and the Greek name for the north wind, Boreas, by Pierre Gassendi in 1621.From the Latin "Aurora" = the dawn and from the Greek "Boreas" = The northern wind. (In Greek the winds coming from the four points of the compass had a different name. Boreas for the northern wind, Notus for the southern wind, Zephyrus for the western wind, and Euro for the eastern wind.)So Aurora Borealis (Northern Lights) mean 'the dawn of the north'.Aurora is the Roman goddess of the dawn and Boreas is the Greek name for north wind. The same effect occurs in the south pole, however there it is called Aurora Australis. Australis is Latin for "South".Aurora Borealis was named after the Roman Goddess of dawn, Aurora, and the Greek name for the north wind, Boreas, by Pierre Gassendi in 1621."Borealis" is the northern aurora, "Australis" is the southern aurora.