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Aurora Flight Sciences (a.k.a. Aurora), flight research subsidiary of Boeing Aurora Health Care , a health care system in Wisconsin, United States Aurora Innovation , an American self-driving car company
Aurora now had left her saffron bed, And beams of early light the heav'ns o'erspread. Rutilius Claudius Namatianus mentions in his 5th century poem De reditu suo: [7] Saffron Aurora had brought forward her fair-weather team: the breeze offshore tells us to haul the sail-yards up.
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 ...
Aurora (disambiguation) This page was last edited on 5 April 2022, at 12:08 (UTC). Text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 License ...
The aurora australis is the southern counterpart of the aurora borealis. Aurora Australis may also refer to: Aurora Australis, a book written, printed, illustrated, and bound in the Antarctic; Aurora Australis, an Australian ship "Aurora Australis", a song by the 3rd and the Mortal from the album Painting on Glass
"Aurora Borealis", by Celldweller from Soundtrack for the Voices in My Head Vol. 1, 2008 "Aurora Borealis", by Eternal Tears of Sorrow from A Virgin and a Whore, 2001 ...
The Southern Lights most often refers to the Aurora australis (The) Southern Lights may also refer to: Southern Lights, by Danielle Steel, 2009; Southern Lights, by SJD, 2004; Southern Lights: Overexposed, a 2015 multimedia album by Alex Faith and Dre Murray "The Southern Lights", an episode of animated TV series The Legend of Korra
The Augustan poet Ovid, in the Ars Amatoria and again in the Metamorphoses, introduces Aura into the tragic story of Cephalus and Procris, perhaps playing on the verbal similarity of Aura and Aurora, the Roman goddess of the dawn (Greek Eos), who had briefly been Cephalus's lover before he returned to his wife.