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Sweden's sky lights up with northern lights research

northern lights
Credit: CC0 Public Domain

Scientists in Sweden put on a light show in the night sky on Thursday, releasing material from a sounding rocket to research the spectacular northern lights phenomena.

The , also known as aurora borealis or polar lights, appear as swathes of blue, green and purple lights flickering and dancing across the sky.

They can occasionally be seen across the Arctic on clear nights.

Researchers at the Swedish Institute of Space Physics sent up the rocket from the Esrange Space Center in the country's far north, releasing materials similar to those in fireworks into the sky at an altitude of between 100-200 kilometers (62-124 miles).

Waves of greenish-white lights could be seen across the dark sky just after 1830 GMT above the northern Swedish town of Kiruna and within a 200-kilometer radius.

Somewhat less spectacular than the real northern lights, the experiment ended up blocking out a real occurring naturally.

The experiment was part of aurora research aimed at helping scientists improve near-space weather forecasts to protect satellites and critical infrastructures.

"People nowadays cannot imagine life without GPS, without TV, without satellite TV, without mobile phones and so on. And to have all of this, we need to understand space weather," Tima Sergienko, lead scientist of the experiment, told AFP by telephone before the launch.

"In some cases when we have strong ionic activity, all this stuff can be destroyed due to space weather," he explained.

In the experiment, barium was released from aluminum cylinders to create the effect.

Similar experiments have been carried out around the world for decades, but Sergienko noted that technology and cameras were much more advanced now.

Researchers "can get much more information from such experiments and from optical measurements", he said.

© 2023 AFP

Citation: Sweden's sky lights up with northern lights research (2023, March 23) retrieved 25 April 2024 from https://phys.org/news/2023-03-sweden-sky-northern.html
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