Seeing thenorthern lightsis a bucketful - lean experience for many , but it ’s easier said than done . Even if you’re able to swing over a trip above the Arctic Circle at the ripe time of class , you ’ll still have to deal with cold weather and potential dashing hopes if the conditions are n’t just right . Viewing the dawning borealis in a 4 K television is n’t quite as impressive as seeing it in person , but it is much more commodious .

This eminent - resolution footage report byNerdistwas snap by marine biologist Alexander Semenov in May 2021 . It shows colorful ribbons of lightheaded streaming over the White Sea in Russia . The telecasting captures every part of the conniption in clear detail , from the starry sky to the frosty weewee , stool it light to pretend you ’re really there . ( If you were viewing thenorthern lightsin real life , however , they would sound more like Sir Francis Bacon sizzling in a pan and less like a movie score . )

The morning borealis results from a reaction between the sun ’s rays and Earth ’s atmosphere . As charged solar particles fly toward our planet , they collide with accelerator molecules near the poles where the magnetised theatre is most concentrated . This " excites " atoms in the standard atmosphere , and as they revert to their original state , they release photon that fall up the sky . break of the day come in a potpourri of colors , but vibrant greens as display in the video are most vulgar .

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Russia ’s White Sea is out of the elbow room for most people , but you do n’t necessarily have to vanish halfway around the earth to see this phenomenon . Solar storms have been known to produceaurorasas far south in the Northern Hemisphere as the contiguous 48 states — though they can be hard to predict . Curling up in your ardent home and watching the picture below requires much less provision ( and less outerwear ) .

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