Image Credit & Copyright: Fredrick Broms (Northern Lights Photography)
Explanation: September's
equinox arrives tomorrow as the Sun crosses the celestial equator heading south. The event marks the astronomical beginning of spring in the southern hemisphere and autumn in the north. And though
the connection is still puzzling, the equinox seasons bring an increase in geomagnetic storms. So as northern nights grow longer, the equinox also heralds the arrival of a good season for
aurora hunters. Recorded on September 20,
these colorful northern lights were captured with camera and wide-angle lens near the Norwegian Sea coast outside Tromsø in Northern Norway.
Shining at altitudes of 100 kilometers or so, the aurora rays are parallel, but perspective makes them appear to radiate from a vanishing point behind the silhouetted pine tree. Stars in this enchanting northern night
include Polarisabove and right of the tree top, and yellowish giant stars
Shedar (Alpha Cassiopiae) to the left and
Kochab (Beta Ursae Minoris) to the right. Bright
Altair shinesthrough the greenish auroral curtain at the lower left of the scene.
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