Magnetosphere of the earth
Aurora
Aurora is a natural light visible in the night sky of the arctic orSolar wind and Solar Storm
Aurora is created due to the activity of the Sun. Sun is a giant ball of
hot gases. At very high temperatures the gases stay in plasma state,
that is the gases are ionised (electrically charged). These ions
continuously stream from the sun's surface, it is the solar wind.
We all know that our earth has a magnetic field. The magnetic field
lines converge towards the pole. The magnetic field protects us from
the harmful solar wind, otherwise it strips away the ozone layer (see
atmosphere of earth). But during solar wind some charged particles
also trap in our atmosphere. Sun doesn't always send the same
amount of charged particles or energy. Sometimes the sun has a
huge outblast and sends more particles than usual solar wind, this
event is called a solar storm. During one kind of solar storm the
sun burps and ejects a huge mass of charged particles to space,
this event is called coronal mass ejection.
When the solar storm reaches earth, some charged particles seep
through the pole region and enter earth's atmosphere. They interact
with the gas particles of the atmosphere causing the aurora lights.
Colours of aurora lights:
Red: At the higher altitude (200-300 km above the earth's surface),
when the charged solar particles interact with the low concentration
of oxygen atoms, then red (wavelength 630 nm) colour light is visible
in the sky. But its intensity is very low and visible only due to high
solar activity.
Green: At low altitude (100-300 km above the earth's surface),when
the solar particles collide with the high concentration of oxygen atoms,
the green (557.7 nm) light is visible. Nitrogen in the atmosphere plays
an important role here. Nitrogen (N2) is stable as a molecular form,
so atomic nitrogen is very rare. When the nitrogen molecule collides
with an oxygen atom, it transfers the energy of the oxygen and as a
result the green colour fades away. The green colour is also mixed
with the red and as a result yellow or pink hue is visible.
Blue: At lower altitude (100-200 km above the earth's surface), the
oxygen atoms are not common. The solar particles collide with the
nitrogen molecules and as a result blue and purple colour curtains
are visible. Very high solar activity can cause auroral light at this low
altitude.
Yellow aurora arises when the red colour is mixed with green.
Pink or magenta colour arises when the atmosphere consists of
both oxygen and nitrogen. When the red light from excited oxygen
is mixed with the blue light of the nitrogen, produces the pink
colour aurora.
Ultra violet aurora:
Ultra violet aurora can't be visible with naked eyes, it needs a special
instrument to be detected. When the charged particles from the sun
collide with the gases of the atmosphere, it produces various
wavelengths of light including ultraviolet.
Sub storm of aurora:
Due to the disturbance of the magnetosphere the energy released
from the tail of the magnetosphere to the high latitude ionosphere.
Substorm is characterised as a sudden brightness and increase in
auroral activity. It is observable mainly in the polar region.
Cause: When the solar wind reaches the Earth's magnetosphere,
it creates a disturbance. This disturbance causes the magnetic lines
to come into close proximity, they break and reconnect in a new
configuration. This process is called magnetosphere reconnection.
This process involves transformation of magnetic energy stored in
Earth's magnetotail into kinetic energy, thermal energy and particle
acceleration. These accelerated charged particles cause the aurora
in the sky.
Auroral Noise:
Auroral noise occurs when the charged particles from the sun hit
the inversion layer (temperature rises with altitude,see the
atmosphere of the Earth) of the earth. It is detected as a static or
crackling sound in a radio receiver.