During fall and winter, colorful bands of light called auroras can be seen dancing across the Arctic sky. Here are some facts and figures about this dazzling display.
Numbers in the News: Northern Lights
GUY EDWARDES/NATUREPL.COM
SHUTTERSTOCK.COM (PARTICLES); GUY EDWARDES/NATUREPL.COM (NORTHERN LIGHTS)
45 MILLION MILES PER HOUR
The speed at which charged particles from the sun strike Earth’s atmosphere, interacting with gases like oxygen and nitrogen to create a glowing aurora
30,000 YEARS OLD
The earliest suspected human record of an aurora, depicted in a cave painting in France
GUY EDWARDES/NATUREPL.COM (NORTHERN LIGHTS); GRAFISSIMO/GETTY IMAGES (GALILEO GALILEI)
1619
The year that Italian astronomer Galileo Galilei first used the term “aurora borealis” to describe the northern lights
2
The number of Earth’s poles, where auroras usually occur. The aurora at the South Pole is called the aurora australis.
60 TO 200 MILES
The height above Earth’s surface at which auroras typically form
THINK ABOUT IT: Have you ever seen the northern or southern lights? Why or why not?
SOURCES: NASA, NOAA SPACE WEATHER PREDICTION CENTER, UNIVERSITY OF ALASKA GEOPHYSICAL INSTITUTE