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Image credits: roksolyana_hilevych #7 “Devil’s Lights” – Forest Barkdoll-Weil. Wyoming, USA. "May 10, 2024: Aurora forecasts promised an incredible display, so I drove to Devils Tower ...
Northern lights or aurora borealis illuminate the night sky over a camper's tent north of San Francisco in Middletown, California. JOSH EDELSON/AFP via Getty Images.
An aurora [a] (pl. aurorae or auroras), [b] also commonly known as the northern lights (aurora borealis) or southern lights (aurora australis), [c] is a natural light display in Earth's sky, predominantly seen in high-latitude regions (around the Arctic and Antarctic). Auroras display dynamic patterns of brilliant lights that appear as curtains ...
The photos may be used in Web sites and other personal or commercial activities. Derivative works are allowed. High-resolution photos may be licensed from the Oregon State Archives. All photos from the collection are found in the source-category Category:Images from Oregon Historical County Records Guide.
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The term is used for similar photos captured elsewhere, such as on board the International Space Station and on Mars. [2] [3] Typical shutter speeds for a star trail range from 15 minutes to several hours, requiring a "Bulb" setting on the camera to open the shutter for a period longer than usual. However, a more practiced technique is to blend ...
On January 25–26, 1938, the sky was lit up with an aurora borealis light storm, seen all across the world. The storm was identical to other storm-induced, low-latitude aurora borealis. The great aurora that was witnessed across Europe, the Americas, and Oceania had not been seen/documented in Europe since 1709, and in the Americas since 1888.
It is also known as a lagas in the sky which comes from the Cornish language term for the sun dog lagas awel meaning 'weather's eye' (lagas, 'eye' and awel, 'weather/wind'). This is in turn related to the Anglo-Cornish term cock's eye for a halo round the Sun or the Moon, also a portent of bad weather. [16]