Akki
Akki
Akki
By-Akhil gharu
R.no-09214802814
AURORA
Auroras are produced when the
magnetosphere is sufficiently disturbed by
the solar wind that the trajectories of
charged particles in both solar wind and
magneto spheric plasma, mainly in the form
of electrons and protons, precipitate them
into the upper atmosphere (thermosphere),
where their energy is lost. The resulting
ionization and excitation of atmospheric
constituents emits light of varying colour
and complexity. The form of the aurora,
occurring within bands around both polar
regions, is also dependent on the amount of
acceleration imparted to the precipitating
particles. Precipitating protons generally
produce optical emissions as incident
hydrogen atoms after gaining electrons from
the atmosphere. Proton auroras are usually
observed at lower latitude.
What causes the aurora?
The typical aurora is caused by collisions
between fast-moving electrons from space
with the oxygen and nitrogen in Earth’s
upper atmosphere. The electrons—which
come from the Earth’s magnetosphere, the
region of space controlled by Earth’s
magnetic field —transfer their energy to
the oxygen and nitrogen atoms and
molecules, making them “excited”. As the
gases return to their normal state, they emit
photons, small bursts of energy in the form
of light. When a large number of electrons
come from the magnetosphere to bombard
the atmosphere, the oxygen and nitrogen
can emit enough light for the eye to detect,
giving us beautiful auroral displays. This
ghostly light originates at altitudes of 100
to more than 400 km (60 to more than 250
miles).
How is the aurora related to the Sun?
In Auroras the Sun provides the energy for the
aurora, but particles in the aurora come from Earth’s
own neighbourhood in space. The Sun’s energy is
carried toward the Earth in the solar wind, a stream
of electrically charged particles following out from
the Sun in all directions. As these particles approach
Earth, they interact with our planet’s magnetic field.
This field detects most of the particles, creating a
huge cavity in the solar wind–the magnetosphere.
This region stretches about 60,000 km toward the
Sun and several hundred thousand kilometres in a
long tail on the night side, away from the Sun.
Variations in the properties of the solar wind control
the amount of energy that can leak into the
magnetosphere. Here the energy is converted into
electric currents and electromagnetic energy and
temporarily stored in the magnetosphere, especially
in its tail. When this influx of energy is relatively
large, the magnetosphere loses its equilibrium, or
balance. To become stable again, the excess energy
is released suddenly, with much of the energy going
into the acceleration of electrons.
The aurora primarily occurs where the
magnetic field guides the electrons from
the tail of the magnetosphere into the
atmosphere where they produce the
aurora. Because the tail is on the night
side of the Earth (away from the Sun), the
more intense, dynamic and beautiful
auroras occur near midnight. For many
years, it was thought that the particles in
the aurora came directly from the Sun
because great aurora displays often
occurred a few days after large eruptions
on the Sun. But particles coming directly
from the Sun would lose their energy at
much higher altitudes than where we wind
the aurora. And due to the detection of
solar wind particles by the
magnetosphere, particles straight from the
Sun can gain access to the atmosphere
only near the Poles, so they would not
form the aurora ovals that we see lying a
couple of thousand kilometres out from
the Poles.
What does an aurora look like?