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Every second, one million tons of matter is blasted from the Sun at the velocity of one million miles per hour, and it's on a collision course with Earth!
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But don't worry, this isn't the opening of a new Michael Bay movie.
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This is The Journey of the Polar Lights.
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The Northern and Southern Lights, also known as the Aurora Borealis and Aurora Australis, respectively, occur when high energy particles from the Sun collide with neutral atoms in our atmosphere.
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The energy emitted from this crash produces a spectacle of light that mankind has marveled at for centuries.
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But the particles journey isn't just as simple as leaving the Sun and arriving at Earth.
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Like any cross-country road trip, there's a big detour and nobody asks for directions.
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Let's track this intergalactic voyage by focusing on three main points of their journey: leaving the sun, making a pit stop in the Earth's magnetic fields, and arriving at the atmosphere above our heads.
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The protons and electrons creating the Northern Lights depart from the Sun's corona.
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The corona is the outermost layer of the Sun's atmosphere and is one of the hottest regions.
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Its intense heat causes the Sun's hydrogen and helium atoms to vibrate and shake off protons and electrons as if they were stripping off layers on a hot, sunny day.
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Impatient and finally behind the wheel, these free protons and electrons move too fast to be contained by the sun's gravity and group together as plasma, an electric charged gas.
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They travel away from the sun as a constant gale of plasma, known as the solar wind.
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However, the Earth prevents the solar wind from travelling straight into the planet by setting up a detour, the magnetosphere.
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The magnetosphere is formed by the Earth's magnetic currents and shields our planet from the solar winds by sending out the particles around the Earth.
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Their opportunity to continue the journey down to the atmosphere comes when the magnetosphere is overwhelmed by a new wave of travellers.
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This event is coronal mass ejection, and it occurs when the Sun shoots out a massive ball of plasma into the solar wind.
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When one of these coronal mass ejections collides with Earth, it overpowers the magnetosphere and creates a magnetic storm.
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The heavy storm stresses the magnetosphere until it suddenly snaps back, like an overstretched elastic band, flinging some of the detoured particles towards Earth.
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The retracting band of the magnetic field drags them down to the aurora ovals, which are the locations of the Northern and Southern Lights.
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After travelling 93 million miles across the galaxy, the Sun's particles finally produce their dazzling light show with the help of some friends.
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Twenty to two hundred miles above the surface, the electrons and protons meet up with oxygen and nitrogen atoms, and they sure are happy to see each other.
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The Sun's particles high five the atoms, giving their energy to the Earth's neutral oxygen and nitrogen atoms.
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When the atoms in the atmosphere are contacted by the particles, they get excited and emit photons.
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Photons are small bursts of energy in the form of light.
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The colors that appear in the sky depend on the wavelength of the atom's photon.
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Excited oxygen atoms are responsible for the green and red colors, whereas excited nitrogen atoms produce blue and deep red hues.
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The collection of these interactions is what creates the Northern and Southern Lights.
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The polar lights are best seen on clear nights in regions close to magnetic north and south poles.
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Nighttime is ideal because the Aurora is much dimmer than sunlight and cannot be seen in daytime.
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Remember to look up to the sky and read up on the Sun's energy patterns, specifically sunspots and solar flares, as these will be good guides for predicting the auroras.