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SPACE

Danes take to the skies for solar eclipse

Danes are streaming to the Faroe Islands for the total solar eclipse, but one group will be soaring above the rest – and the clouds that threaten to block the view from the ground.

Danes take to the skies for solar eclipse
An archive photo of a 2003 partial eclipse over Denmark. Photo: Mogens Ladegaard/Scanpix
To make sure clouds don't block their view of Friday's total solar eclipse in the Faroe Islands, a group of 50 Danes were on Thursday preparing to watch the event from a Boeing 737.
 
"At a height of 11 kilometres we're guaranteed not to have any clouds," John Valentin Mikkelsen, a 63-year-old teacher from Aarhus, told AFP.
 
The view comes at a price — and not just the 15,800 kroner (2,121 euros, $2,261) Mikkelsen and his wife paid for their own row of three seats on the plane.
 
 
While they will be shielded from the vagaries of Faroese weather, there are some things they won't get to experience when watching the eclipse from the sky.
 
"If you're on the ground you can hear the birds behaving differently, and the temperature falls," he said. 
 
"And maybe we won't get the full view as the windows are quite small," he added.
 
The Faroe Islands, located north of Britain and home to 50,000 people, is along with the Norwegian archipelago of Svalbard the only place the total eclipse will be visible.
 
The Danish plane was chartered by a science magazine which charged 7,400 kroner for a single seat in the middle of the aircraft and 8,900 kroner for a window seat.
 
Despite its 148-passenger capacity the aircraft, which will attempt to follow the moon's shadow, will only carry 50 eclipse chasers.
 
The last of 48 tickets was snapped up in January. Two people won their spots in a competition.
 
'A bit hooked'
Danish astronomer and astrophysicist Anja Cetti Andersen will speak on the flight, which takes off from Copenhagen at 0715 GMT and will reach the Faroe Islands' airspace two hours later.
 
Mikkelsen admitted to having become "a bit hooked" on solar eclipses after driving with his family to Munich in 1999 to watch the phenomenon for the first time.
 
"I inherited some money from my brother, who unfortunately passed away, and we wanted that to benefit the whole family. So we took our children and their partners to Turkey in 2006 to watch the solar eclipse there, and it was really, really spectacular," he said.
 
Since then he has also travelled to Russia, China and Australia for the same reason.
 
The Danish autonomous territory is expecting a surge of more than 8,000 eclipse tourists according to tourism officials, a boon to an economy otherwise largely dependent on fishing and an annual subsidy from Copenhagen.
 
"It will seem as though time has been paused, as people from all across the world will gather together with Faroese locals to witness the rare and extraordinary occasion," stated a website set up by its tourism board for the occasion, which will live-stream the two and a half minute blackout.
 
The only caveat: Faroese weather is known for being cloudy and unpredictable, and Friday's forecast is for partially cloudy weather with showers.
 
"Chances of the skies being overcast were a bit high, so we didn't want to spend money on that," said Mikkelsen, who initially baulked at the high price for watching the eclipse from a plane.
 
"But then we agreed that we had some money to spare, so we said: 'You only live once, so why not?'" he added.

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NORTHERN LIGHTS

Why the northern lights might be visible in more of Norway than usual

Current atmospheric conditions mean there's a good chance the aurora borealis will be visible across much more of Norway than normal on Friday.

Why the northern lights might be visible in more of Norway than usual
Photo by stein egil liland from Pexels

Normally, the northern lights are only visible in northern Norway, typically between April and September.

According to the Geophysical Institute of Alaska the KP index, which is a system of measuring aurora strength, will reach Kp 5 out of a possible 9.

Anything Kp 5 and above is classed as a geomagnetic storm. This means you will be able to see the green lady a lot further south than you usually would.

The reason for this high forecast is “corona holes” (no relation to the pandemic). These are holes in the Sun’s atmosphere, where solar wind is thrown out at high speeds.

The northern lights occur when the protons and electrons from solar wind hit the particles in the Earths atmosphere and release energy.  

“You can see it down towards eastern Norway as an arc on the horizon, while in central Norway and in Trøndelag it will be right over your head.” Pål Brekke, head of space research at the Norwegian Space Center, told newspaper VG.

READ MORE:Taking pictures of the Northern Lights: 10 expert photography tips 

While there will be strong northern lights activity over large parts of the country, it does not necessarily mean that everyone will get to see it.

“It doesn’t look too promising in Nordland and Troms”, state meteorologist, Sjur Wergerland told VG.

However, he also added that the forecast looks much better further south.

Even then though there is no guarantee you will see the northern lights, according to Brekke.

“It is not certain that the northern lights will move as far south as we think, but I recommend people to follow forecasts on websites to stay up to date,” he said.

In order to see the northern lights, the weather will also have to be on your side. Clear skies are best and going to areas with no or low light pollution is important too.

If you are lucky enough to see the lights make sure you don’t wave at them. Doing so will cause the lights to lift you up and take you away according to Norwegian folklore.

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