Impressions
of a remarkable night
April 6/7 2000
Copyright: Robert Wielinga, Utrecht, Netherlands (rpw@knoware.nl)
All aurora
photographs were made with a 2.8/28mm lens on Kodak
Ektachrome 400 film (pushed to ISO 800). Exposures range
from 5 seconds up to 20 seconds. (Click
on images for a larger picture.)
Conjunction
A conjunction of three
planets and the moon: the small moon cressent was
accompanied by Saturn (top), Jupiter (bright, right of
the moon) and Mars (fainter, close to Jupiter).
Photo at 19.30 UT with a 2.5/135 mm lens, 2 seconds on
Kodak Ektachrome 400 (pushed to ISO 800). The
conjunction is seen here over the river De Vecht, near
Utrecht.
Aurora
From 21.00 UT on April 6
until 01.00 UT at April 7 a fantastic Aurora display was
seen from my hometown Utrecht in the Netherlands. At
20.45 UT the first sign of the aurora was seen: a long
vertical red cloud in the north-east. This was followed
by activity in the north-west from 21.00 UT-22.30 UT.
There were several red clouds with white-yellow
streamers appearing from time to time. Most of these
streamers lasted for one ore two minutes. Near the
northern horizon the sky was a bright green-blue.
Activity dropped and only weak activity was seen after
22.00 UT.
At
22.45 Ut auroral activity was seen at the
northern/north-western horizon: in a green-blue band (no
more than 10 degrees above the horizon) a pattern of
constantly changing vertical lines was seen. This
remarkable event ended at about 23.00 UT, and it looked
as if the auroral activity ended. But one look outside
the window at 23.15 UT made my heart bounce at maximum
speed! Several bright red clouds were visible, much
brighter and much more extended than before. In less
than five minutes more than half of the sky was covered
with aurora! The colour was blood-red, with intense
yellow streamers in a constantly changing pattern. The
northern horizon was now intense green-blue, up to 30
degrees. The red clouds were positioned in the
north-east and north-west. It looked if they were
connected by a faint white band.
This
activity lasted at least until 00.00 UT. At that time I
went inside. At 00.45 UT when I looked out again not a
single trace of aurora was seen. But when at 01.00 UT I
finally went to bend another red glow was seen in the
north-north-east.
Aurora in the north-west
where winter constellations Auriga and the Twins are
setting. Photo made at 21.00 UT.
The
Big Dipper (in the zenith) bathing in the red glow of
Aurora.
Northern Lights:
Polaris in the Little Bear is in the top op this
photograph.
The green glow in
the north-western sky with a curtain of streamers. A
very intense yellow streak near Castor and Pollux in the
Twins.
The coronal mass
ejection (CME) that caused this strong auroral activity.
This time sequence was made with the coronagrah of the
SOHO spacecraft.
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