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The Northern Lights One of Nature’s Best Kept Secrets

The Northern Lights

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The Northern Lights. One of Nature’s Best Kept Secrets. My Hobby. Observing this phenomenon Then posting photos on my web site www.prairiejournal.com Started site in April 21 Journal or blog Note: am an observer, not a scientist. Is it easy?. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: The Northern Lights

The Northern Lights

One of Nature’s

Best Kept Secrets

Page 2: The Northern Lights

My Hobby

• Observing this phenomenon

• Then posting photos on my web site– www.prairiejournal.com– Started site in April 21

• Journal or blog

• Note: am an observer, not a scientist

Page 3: The Northern Lights

Is it easy?

• Photos from numerous days on my web site make it look like it’s easy to observe the northern lights at my location – Just north of

Bismarck, ND

Page 4: The Northern Lights

I’m Here to Tell You

It’s Not!!!

Page 5: The Northern Lights

Hobby Requires:

• Persistence

• Persistence

• Persistence

Page 6: The Northern Lights

Today’s Presentation

• How to be successful at viewing the northern lights

– There’s no secret formula

• Why North Dakota & other Upper Midwest states are some of the best places in world to observe

• Some special observations

• How to make this a great hobby

Page 7: The Northern Lights

Ways to Guarantee Failure

• You ask me to call you when the northern lights are going to be out

• If I did that to everyone who requested it, that’s all I would get done

• You say to me, “I heard the northern lights were fantastic last night. Can I expect to see the same tonight?”

Page 8: The Northern Lights

What You Need to be Successful

• An addiction to your computer– Daily review of web

sites

• Then, if conditions look good, go out

Page 9: The Northern Lights

Internet Tools

• www.spaceweather.com – consider paying small fee to receive phone alerts

• www.sec.noaa.gov/ftpdir/forecasts/RSGA/0419RSGA.txt - forecasts

• www.sec.noaa.gov/ftpdir/forecasts/ALTS.txt - alerts in the past 24 hours

Page 10: The Northern Lights

Internet Tools

• www.sec.noaa.gov – current space weather conditions

• www.spacew.com – consider paying small fee to receive e-mail watches & warnings / read the forum

• http://kate.nic.ualberta.ca:8000/portal/rt_oval/index.html - real time auroral oval

Page 11: The Northern Lights

Soak up the Information

• If a display is expected & just starting, I have observed enough that I can look at numbers on web sites to know if the northern lights are out at my location

• I then call my dad to confirm

Page 12: The Northern Lights

My Model (in head) Works for Me

Why• I study the internet

prior to a display & then after display

• I equate the numbers that I see to display

Page 13: The Northern Lights

The Model isn’t Precise

Why?• It’s not an exact science• Typically you need some

combination of below to work in your favor to see the northern lights– A high solar wind speed– High densities– Interplanetary magnetic

field – shift to south

Page 14: The Northern Lights

Forecasting an Inexact Science

• August 16, 2002 – story

• Same as weather forecasting 100 years ago?

• Why persistence is so important– You must experience failure

many times to be successful

Page 15: The Northern Lights

Why Lost Sleep is Important

• Displays are great– However, the substorms

rock • When lights are most active &

colorful

– Substorms are often short lived

• Once you see one, you learn to appreciate the beauty & realize that the time lost watching just a green or white glow is worth it

Page 16: The Northern Lights

A Great State (Region) to Observe

• You can see displays year round in North Dakota

– We have dark skies 365 days per year, unlike Alaska or northern Canada

• Our climate is drier, resulting in more nights with clear skies

• During major displays, auroral oval shifts south of location – WOW!

Page 17: The Northern Lights

Appreciation

• My perception - we appreciate northern lights more because displays don’t occur everyday

Page 18: The Northern Lights

Special Observations

• Astronomy photo of the day

Page 19: The Northern Lights

Special Observations

• March 30, 2001 – first time see parts of sky turn blood red

Page 20: The Northern Lights

Special Observations

• May 15, 2005 – northern lights should have been visible at 10:30 p.m. when dark, but took until 1:15 a.m.

Page 21: The Northern Lights

Special Observations

• June 18, 2003 – one of longest days of the year - northern lights in northeast (brightest part of sky during dawn)

Page 22: The Northern Lights

Special Observations

• October 28, 2008 – Fastest moving display ever seen – a visual wow!

Page 23: The Northern Lights

Special Observations

• December 14, 2006 – lots of action that never witnessed before – every display is different – keeps me coming back

Page 24: The Northern Lights

Special Observations

• April 19, 2002 – Monitored much of night – display occurred just before dawn – saw start of major display

Page 25: The Northern Lights

Special Observations

• December 24, 2001 – my Christmas lights – photo appeared on www.cnn.com

Page 26: The Northern Lights

My Hobby

• Share photos via web site– www.prairiejournal.c

om

• Nearly 50,000 page views of December 14, 2006 display– Forwarded e-mails

Page 27: The Northern Lights

My Hobby

• Opportunities to speak & share stories– Such as today

• Opportunities to talk on subject with small group of people from around world– Via internet forums

Page 28: The Northern Lights

My Hobby

• Opportunities to have photos featured elsewhere– www.cnn.com– New York Times– “Resort”

• Online brochure– Use to respond to e-

mail questions– Used by North

Dakota Tourism

Page 29: The Northern Lights

Reference Material

• Books– Secrets of the Auroral Borealis, Vol. 29, by

Syun-Ichi Akasofu – The Aurora Watcher’s Handbook, by Neil

Davis– Aurora: The Mysterious Northern Lights,

by Candace Sherk Savage

• Online brochure