Aurora Borealis is a dance of lights that happens up high in the sky, usually near the North Pole.
Imagine you're playing with a toy that has tiny colorful balls inside, when you shake it, the colors light up and move around. That's kind of what happens with Aurora Borealis, but way bigger! It’s like nature is shaking its toy, and the lights are the colorful balls moving in the sky.
How it works
Up high, there are invisible particles from the sun that zoom through space, they're called solar winds. When these fast-moving particles meet the air up near the top of Earth’s atmosphere, they bump into each other and make light.
It's like when you run into a friend on the playground, you both stop for a second and then laugh. The particles also "laugh" by making colors, which we see as shimmering lights in the sky.
Sometimes it looks like waves or ribbons of green, pink, or purple, just like how water moves when you drop a stone into a pond!
Why it happens near the North Pole
The Earth is like a giant magnet. The solar winds are drawn to the north and south poles, where the magnetic pull is strongest, that’s why we usually see these lights up north!
Examples
- A family camping in Alaska points to the glowing lights above and says, 'Look, it's Aurora Borealis!'
- A teacher shows a video of the Northern Lights and introduces the topic: 'This is Aurora Borealis.'
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See also
- {"response":"{\"What is The Aurora Borealis like a light show in the sky?
- How Does the Aurora Borealis Actually Work?
- Who is Northern Lights?
- What Causes Auroras, and Why Do They Light Up the Sky?
- How Does The Mysterious Singing River Work?