If you missed the Northern Lights at the weekend, don’t worry – there may be another chance to catch the awe-inspiring natural wonder.
Experts at the UK’s Met Office say people in Scotland, northern England and Northern Ireland will be able to witness the colourful light display tonight.
Best viewable between 11pm and 2am, the lights are caused by the interaction between charged particles from a ‘coronal mass ejection’ – a violent expulsion from the sun – with atoms in Earth’s upper atmosphere.
Those as far south as Newcastle, Belfast and the Isle of Man could see the display by looking northwards after nightfall – and it should be visible outside of the UK too.
Meanwhile, people who are too far south might be able to capture the streams of colourful light with their smartphone camera, even if they can’t see it themselves.
Northern Lights also know as the Aurora Borealis shine across Ribblehead Viaduct, Ribblehead, Yorkshire, England, September 13, 2024
Northern Lights – which is becoming a more frequent occurrence than usual this year – from the Carron Valley Reservoir in Stirlingshire, Scotland, September 12, 2024
According to the Met Office, people with a decent camera should be able to capture shots of the aurora even when it’s not visible with the naked eye.
Look north if you’re in the northern hemisphere (or south if in the southern hemisphere) and set up your camera likewise.
‘Cameras help as the long exposure allows loads of light in and enhances the colours more than the human eye can see,’ a spokesperson said.
‘That is why you see pictures as far south as Cornwall sometimes though you’re unlikely to see it with the naked eye that far south.’
The Met Office said the aurora should be visible with the naked eye in Scotland and Northern Ireland as well as parts of England and Wales, mainly in the north.
A Met Office spokesperson said: ‘There are generally clear skies for most tonight, however it will be cloudier across the Northern Isles and western Scotland, with patchy rain and drizzle as well as cloudier skies in Northern Ireland.
‘There’s also patchy cloud for some in the southeast and East Anglia.’
Frequently there are beautiful light shows in the sky. These lights are called auroras. If you’re near the North Pole, it is called an aurora borealis. Pictured, Ribblehead, September 13
The color of the aurora depends on which gas is being excited by the electrons and on how much energy is being exchanged. Pictured, Northern Lights from the Carron Valley Reservoir in Stirlingshire, Scotland, September 12, 2024
The color of the aurora depends on which gas is being excited by the electrons and on how much energy is being exchanged. Pictured, Cullercoats Bay in North Tyneside, September 12
A Met Office animation shows the auroral oval – the ring-like range of auroral activity that determines the range of the Northern Lights and where it will be most visible
‘Lingering effects are still likely to persist into Monday night and early Tuesday morning, the Met Office says.
‘Subsequent nights currently do not indicate a high likelihood of significantly enhanced aurora.’
Tonight’s aurora stems from a coronal mass ejection (CME) – a massive expulsion of plasma from the sun’s corona, its outermost layer, which left the sun on Saturday.
The high-energy particles travelled from the sun towards us at hundreds of miles per second before bombarding Earth’s magnetosphere – an event commonly known as a ‘solar storm’.
At this point, some of the energy and small particles can travel down the magnetic field lines at the north and south poles into our planet’s atmosphere.
There, the particles interact with gases in our atmosphere, resulting in beautiful displays of light in the sky, known as auroras.
Oxygen gives off green and red light, while nitrogen glows blue and purple.
Although not dangerous to humans, the particles aurora can damage power grids on Earth and satellites in orbit, which can lead to internet disruptions.
The aurora is due to a coronal mass ejection (CME) – a massive expulsion of plasma from the Sun’s corona, its outermost layer (artist’s depiction)
The northern lights, or aurora borealis, visible in the sky north of the Fall Lake Campground Thursday, September 12, 2024
Meanwhile, in the southern hemisphere – where it’s known as aurora australis – the spectacle should be visible as far north as Tasmania and New Zealand’s south island.
‘There is a chance that aurora could be seen further north than this,’ Met Office adds.
In North America, the strongest likelihood of seeing the aurora tonight is from Canada and Alaska, according to the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA).
People in northern parts of Montana, North Dakota, Minnesota and Wisconsin may also see the event although it may be fainter.
NOAA has rated it ‘G3’ (on a scale of one to five), so it’s considered ‘strong’, meaning it could disrupt power systems on Earth and spacecraft in orbit.
According to the US’s National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA), there’s the strongest likelihood of seeing the aurora over Canada and Alaska
Aurora can often be observed somewhere on Earth from just after sunset or just before sunrise, but are not visible during daylight hours.
The best way to see the stunning displays is to find a dark place, away from light pollution such as street lights and ideally a cloud-free sky.
Some of the best aurora spots around the UK are in areas of high elevation (closer to the magnetosphere) and away from cities that pollute the sky with artificial light.
These aurora hotspots include the Lake District in Cumbria, Arthur’s Seat in Edinburgh, the Shetland Islands and Whitley Bay, North Tyneside.
Aurora are generally becoming more frequent as we enter solar maximum – the period of peak solar activity during the sun’s 11-year solar cycle, when the surface of the sun is more active than ever.
The solar cycle is the cycle that the sun’s magnetic field goes through about every 11 years, before it completely flips and the sun’s north and south poles switch places.
Scientists can track the solar cycle is by counting the number of ‘sunspots’ – dark areas on the sun’s surface – and when exactly they appear, mostly using satellites.
Aurora are generally becoming more frequent as we enter solar maximum – the period of peak solar activity during the sun’s 11-year solar cycle. Pictured, Aurora above the the Torridon mountains, Scotland, September 12, 2024
The aurora borealis appears over Bamburgh Lighthouse, in Northumberland on the North East coast of England, November 5, 2023
The beginning of an 11-year solar cycle, when the sun has the fewest sunspots, is known as the solar minimum – but over time the number of sunspots increases as it reaches solar maximum.
A recent study predicted the solar maximum is coming sooner than expected – 2024 rather than late 2025 – meaning space weather will be most pronounced.
‘The most intense storms can sometimes result in catastrophic orbital decay of low Earth orbiting satellites and disrupt satellite based services such as communications and navigational networks,’ study author Dr Dibyendu Nandi, a physicist from the IISER Kolkata Center of Excellence in Space Sciences in India, told MailOnline.
‘They can also induce strong disturbances in the geomagnetic field tripping electric power grids located in high latitude regions.
‘Of course, they also create beautiful auroras so we can expect 2024 to be a good year for aurora hunters.’