Recent Stories
- Unborn babies 'practise' facial expressions in the womb
- Lancaster leads the way in cyber security bursary scheme
- Physicists gain insight into the UK's biggest killer
- Engineering students make finals of national start-up business competition
- Social media plagued by privacy problems, say researchers
- Lancaster Environment Centre conducts roadside pollution research for BBC
- Lancaster set to receive funding boost to stimulate UK's economy
- Billion-year-old water could hold clues to life on Earth and Mars
- How do we find out about cyber criminals?
- First, carbon footprints... now you can calculate your 'nitrogen footprint'
Northern Lights talk by astrophysicist
Story supplied by LU Press Office
The northern lights: charged particles from the sun interacting with the Earth's atmosphere
Pupils from Bolton School were given a fascinating lecture on the Northern Lights by Dr Jim Wild from Lancaster University.
The presentation to the Sixth Form boys and girls was the second annual lecture organised by the University through a partnership with Bolton School, which is one of the largest independent schools in the country.
Dr Wild is a lecturer with the Space Plasma Environment and Radio Science Group at the Department of Communication Systems at InfoLab21. His research investigates the physics behind the aurora borealis, the impact of space weather on human technology and the interaction between the Martian atmosphere and the interplanetary environment.
He spoke of the wonder of the Northern Lights and how it is possible for the night sky to turn from pitch black to swathes of green and red light arcing or appearing as a rippling curtain.
The dancing lights are visible, to varying degrees, from the ice-caps to the Mediterranean but it is over the Arctic Circle (and Antarctica) where they can be seen most often. In such areas legends abound explaining what they are - anything from the gods playing football to the spirits of young women who died before they got married. Dr Wild explained how the lights have influenced art and culture, citing Philip Pullman's book The Northern Lights as a recent example.
Explaining the physics behind the lights, Dr Wild said the sun throws out billions of tonnes of matter and light each day, which become a solar wind of electrically charged particles which would hit the earth if it were not for the natural occurring protective magnetic field around the world. However, these fields are weaker at the very northern and southern tips of the world - these are known as the magnetic poles. Some of the charged particles break through the field at the poles and collide with gaseous particles in the earth's atmosphere. Collisions with different gases cause different light formations.
Fri 16 July 2010
Associated Links
- Dr Jim Wild - Jim Wild's personal website has details of his research and public lectures
- Space Plasma Environment And Radio Science (SPEARS) Group - combining research of the Earth's space environment, through observations of high-latitude phenomena, with innovative design and operation of ground-based space research facilities
Latest News
Unborn babies 'practise' facial expressions in the womb
Researchers from Durham and Lancaster Universities suggest that a foetus's ability to show a "pain" facial expression is a developmental process which could potentially give doctors another index of the health of a foetus.
Story supplied by LU Press Office
Mon 17 June 2013
Lancaster leads the way in cyber security bursary scheme
Lancaster is one of four UK universities selected to take part in an 'industry first' sponsorship initiative encouraging students to take up Masters-level cyber security degrees.
Story supplied by LU Press Office
Mon 10 June 2013
Physicists gain insight into the UK's biggest killer
Cardiovascular disease is the leading cause of death in the UK, accounting for a third of all fatalities through illnesses such as stroke and heart disease.
Story supplied by LU Press Office
Wed 29 May 2013
Engineering students make finals of national start-up business competition
Engineering students Scott Nash, Daniel Richardson and Aaron Aboshio have won the northern heat of the Youth Entrepreneurs Scheme 'Engineering YES' competition for their spin-out renewable energy company Atlantis.
Thu 23 May 2013