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NORTHERN LIGHTS

Sweden’s sky lights up with northern lights research

Scientists in Sweden put on a light show in the night sky on Thursday, releasing material from a sounding rocket to research the spectacular northern lights phenomena.

Sweden's sky lights up with northern lights research
Northern lights (aurora borealis) illuminate the sky over Jukkasjärvi, near Kiruna, in Swedish Lapland, on November 20, 2022. Photo: Jonathan Nackstrand/AFP

The northern lights, also known as aurora borealis or polar lights, appear as swathes of blue, green and purple lights flickering and dancing across the sky.

They can occasionally be seen across the Arctic on clear nights.

Researchers at the Swedish Institute of Space Physics sent up the rocket from the Esrange Space Centre in the country’s far north, releasing materials similar to those in fireworks into the sky at an altitude of between 100-200 kilometres (62-124 miles).

Waves of greenish-white lights could be seen across the dark sky just after 1830 GMT above the northern Swedish town of Kiruna and within a 200-kilometre radius.

Somewhat less spectacular than the real northern lights, the experiment ended up blocking out a real aurora borealis occurring naturally.

The experiment was part of aurora research aimed at helping scientists improve near-space weather forecasts to protect satellites and critical infrastructures.

“People nowadays cannot imagine life without GPS, without TV, without satellite TV, without mobile phones and so on. And to have all of this, we need to understand space weather,” Tima  Sergienko, lead scientist of the experiment, told AFP by telephone before the launch.

“In some cases when we have strong ionic activity, all this stuff can be destroyed due to space weather,” he explained.

In the experiment, barium was released from aluminium cylinders to create the effect.

Similar experiments have been carried out around the world for decades, but Sergienko noted that technology and cameras were much more advanced now.

Researchers “can get much more information from such experiments and from optical measurements”, he said.

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NORTHERN LIGHTS

Why 2024 is a great year for the Northern Lights in Sweden

Lapland tour operator Chad Blakley says the Northern Lights are stronger than they have been for a decade.

Why 2024 is a great year for the Northern Lights in Sweden

Chad Blakley, who runs the Northern Lights tour specialist Lights over Lapland, has long been gearing up for the solar maximum, the peak in the sun’s eleven-year cycle, and now, he says, it is starting to arrive. 

“What we have seen since it became astronomically dark in late September is that the reality matches the expectations. We are seeing more powerful auroras than we’ve ever seen,” he told The Local’s Sweden in Focus podcast in November. 

“One of the gentlemen who works for us, he’s been a guide for a decade, been out there for 10 years. He’s been there through the last solar minimum, right back up to this solar maximum. And he said multiple times this season, I’ve never seen anything like that.” 

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The Northern Lights phenomenon is generated when a stream of charged particles from the sun, called solar wind, collides with atoms of oxygen and nitrogen in the Earth’s atmosphere, creating dazzling displays of light green, red, orange or blue light. It fluctuates in strength depending on the level of solar activity. 

The Space Weather Prediction Center in the US in October reported that the peak in solar activity was arriving sooner and more powerfully than it had predicted in 2019 and was now likely to come between January and November 2024. 

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In Abisko, a hiking and winter sports resort popular as a viewing station for the Northern Lights, the displays are already unusually intense, Blakley said.

“We have a webcam that’s actually the oldest running Aurora Borealis webcam on planet Earth. And you can go right back and look through the catalogue and compare pictures from a year ago, two years ago, three years ago, all the way back. And what we’re seeing right now really and truly is the most powerful, the most repetitive and most intense Northern Lights.” 

Even in a year like this, he stressed, there was no absolute guarantee that guests would see the phenomenon at all, let alone a once-in-a-decade display. 

“But I can say that right now and the next season and potentially the season thereafter are quite literally the best times in any of our lifetimes to be able to go and see the Northern Lights.”

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Blakley, a former photographer from Louisiana, came to Abisko with his Swedish wife Linnea back in 2008 to work a tourist season and never left, setting up Lights over Lapland back in 2010. 

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