Mysterious Blue Aurora Hints at Unknown Atmospheric Processes
Conjure, in your mind’s eye, a visual to accompany the word ‘aurora’. What you imagine might be dominated by the color green, elaborate swirls and swooshes that dance across the sky above a frozen landscape.
But the opulent glows that appear in the sky – as atmospheric gasses are struck by energetic solar particles – aren’t limited to the most well-known manifestation. Auroras can appear in a wide array of hues that vary according to altitude, latitude, and which gasses are involved.
For the particularly powerful geomagnetic storm that rattled Earth’s magnetic cage in May 2024, a strange blue glow appeared. That is not unheard-of… but this one was at low latitudes, reaching unusually high into the sky.
Now, using images snapped by citizen scientists in Japan, physicists Sota Nanjo of the Swedish Institute of Space Physics and Kazuo Shiokawa of Nagoya University have figured out the most likely explanation for the eerie blue light.
But their explanation creates another problem that atmospheric scientists will need to solve.
“Our findings suggest that nitrogen molecular ions may have accelerated upward by some mechanism and were responsible for the formation of the blue-dominant aurora,” Shiokawa explains.
“To date, it is not well understood how nitrogen molecular ions with large molecular weight can exist at such high altitudes. Such ions are not easily able to exist for long periods of time due to their heavy mass and short dissociative-recombination time intervals; however, they are observed at high altitudes. The process is shrouded in mystery.”
Earth’s auroras are usually the result of a huge influx of solar particles, unleashed from the Sun in a coronal mass ejection or solar wind. These particles stream through the Solar System.
If Earth is in the path of the eruption, the particles slam into the magnetic field, where they are diverted and accelerated along magnetic field lines to the poles, where they are dumped into the atmosphere.
The interaction between the solar particles and the gasses in Earth’s atmosphere causes the atmospheric particles to gain a bit of energy. When the atoms making up the atmospheric gasses drop back to their original energy state, the energy is released as a photon – that’s the source of the glow.
It’s similar to the mechanism that makes fluorescent lights glow. And, as with fluorescent lights, the color of the glow depends on different factors, such as the type of particle, and the amount of energy they gain and lose.
Green and red auroras, for example, are generated by oxygen atoms losing energy at different altitudes. Nitrogen atoms can emit blue and red photons. When these hues mix in the sky, they can produce yellow, purple, pink, and orange colors.
See more here Science AlertÂ
Please Donate Below To Support Our Ongoing Work To Defend The Scientific Method
PRINCIPIA SCIENTIFIC INTERNATIONAL, legally registered in the UK as a company incorporated for charitable purposes. Head Office: 27 Old Gloucester Street, London WC1N 3AX.Â
Trackback from your site.
Max DeLoaches
| #
What is not being reported is the reason why there is an influx of comic high energy protons. The reason is that the Earth’s magnetosphere or cosmic radiation shields are down about 25%, hence the redness or pink glow that shows in the aurora too! Not a good sign.
Reply