Japanese scientists record a huge and rare ‘polar rain aurora’ from Earth for the first time

Polar auroras occur when energy carried by the solar wind interacts with the Earth’s atmosphere. But polar rain auroras are rare because they occur when the solar wind is almost non-existent.

Enzo Campetella Meteored Argentina 06/29/2024 18:00 7 min

The surprising event took place on Christmas Eve 2022, when a huge aurora lit up the sky for thousands of kilometers around the North Pole, as recounted by Nature. But it wasn’t just another aurora, because that light show offered scientists a unique view of the elusive and rare “polar shower aurora.” This rare bright phenomenon forms when energetic electrons from the Sun cascade onto Earth’s polar regions..

For polar rain auroras to occur, the solar wind needs to be minimal, something that is not common. This event that occurred on Christmas 2022 is now part of an extensive study recently published.

In general terms, Auroras form when charged particles streaming from the Sun collide and interact with the Earth’s magnetic field.. Their energy is often transformed into luminous spectacles of dancing green curtains, towering red pillars, or other spectacles like those that dazzled sky watchers around the world last May. The more intense the solar flares are, the farther from the poles the auroras can be observed.

But polar shower auroras are a special type that is very rare to see.. It is formed when electrons traveling directly from the Sun’s corona, or from its outer atmosphere, collide with the Earth’s atmosphere. These auroras They are strange because there are rarely enough electrons colliding with the atmosphere to generate a glow. And other types of charged particles often interfere with these electrons, preventing polar shower auroras from forming.

A unique dawn

But the December 2022 event was unique. For 28 hours, the avalanche of other solar particles that make up the solar wind slowed to a trickle.. Electrons from the polar shower fell unhindered to Earth, creating a greenish glow that extended more than 3,000 kilometers across the North Pole.

polar rain aurora two
Schematic of the relationship between electrons from the Sun and the polar rain aurora on the polar cap.

According to Keisuke Hosokawa, a space physicist at the University of Electrocommunications in Tokyo quoted by Nature and who led the team that published this discovery in Science AdvancesAnyone looking up that night in the Arctic could have seen it. Unlike the curtains and pillars of light of normal auroras, this auroral glow spread across the sky.”

LIt took time to analyze the information collected two years agoand finally on June 21, the results of the investigation were published. Scientists have already occasionally detected polar rain auroras, but this has been from satellites that observe the poles from above. Since 2011, Hosokawa has had a robotic camera pointed at the sky of the Norwegian islands of Svalbard, in the Arctic Ocean, hoping to capture the first polar aurora from land. Finally, his wish was achieved.

The wait paid off

The researcher didn’t know about the event until January 2023, when he examined data from about three weeks earlier. The aurora of that period stood out for being “very different” from other types of aurorahe said later. After looking at the footage from his camera, Hosokawa then checked images of the polar regions taken by US military weather satellites. In them, he saw that the auroral glow covered almost the entire northern polar cap.

youtube video id=GX5FbXX-hks

In recent decades, satellites have detected small-scale polar auroras, but the most recent observation of a large aurora occurred in May 1999, he told Nature, when the solar wind also temporarily decreased. According to Yongliang Zhang, co-author of the study and a space physicist at the Johns Hopkins University Applied Physics Laboratory in Laurel, Maryland, Studying polar shower auroras could help scientists understand how the solar wind interacts with Earth’s magnetic field.

Because these types of auroras are so elusive, there is now a lot of analysis ahead to learn more. High-sensitivity ground-based images have visualized complex spatial structures of the polar shower aurora that possibly manifest the internal pattern of the solar wind or even organizations in the Sun’s chromosphere.The information provided by satellites is very useful, but having high-quality footage of the entire event allows for better conclusions to be drawn..


News reference
:

Keisuke Hosokawa et al. ,Exceptionally gigantic aurora in the polar cap on a day when the solar wind almost disappeared.Sci. Adv.10,eadn5276(2024).DOI:10.1126/sciadv.adn5276

 
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