6

I was lucky enough to witness a medium-strength aurora recently in Iceland (KP ~3). We saw the classic rippling arc of green light, which at times seemed to consist of smaller flickering vertical columns of light with sharp boundaries. They were similar to the photo attached below. I believe they're described as 'Rayed Band (RB)' aurora.

I understand the basics of aurora formation (charged solar particles exciting atmospheric particles, which emit light). However I'm struggling to find any information about these vertical bands - I'd like to know specifically what causes them? Is it an optical phenomena or something astro-physical? Are the atmospheric particles streaking downwards as they emit light?

Rayed Band Aurora

1 Answers1

4

Individual rays in an aurora do not correspond to individual particles; they correspond to separated streams of particles. Here is a good article that explains aurora borealis.

Edit 1: Take note: in the article it's implied that the rays correspond to magnetic field lines. That's a bit misleading. Magnetic "lines" don't really exist. They are just lines that we draw to point "downhill" in a magnetic field. But "downhill" lines can be drawn everywhere; they're not confined to specific places. The imaginary things we call magnetic field lines simply indicate the local direction of the field.

An incoming mostly uniform swarm of particles from the Sun can become separate particle streams via a very complicated interaction between the incoming mostly uniform swarm of particles from the sun, the Earth's magnetic field, and the Earth's upper atmosphere. The streams, once formed, follow the local direction of the geomagnetic field.

Edit 2: This is an intriguing question. A bit of further searching turned this up, about Birkeland currents, which addresses filamentation (breaking into separate streams) of currents in the aurora.

S. McGrew
  • 24,774
  • Thanks for this - relevant line seems to be: "Similarly magnetic field lines of the Earth guide electrons of the aurora to come down in the auroral zone. No wonder the rays of the aurora pointed along such lines! Each was produced by a ray of electrons, riding its own field line down to the atmosphere." So the various streams are simply 'surfing' separate field lines downwards? – freddieaj Sep 26 '19 at 13:59
  • That line can be a bit misleading: magnetic "lines" don't really exist. They are just lines that we draw to point "downhill" in a magnetic field. But "downhill" lines can be drawn everywhere; they're not confined to specific places. What we call magnetic field lines simply indicate the direction of the field. So the separate particle streams are formed by a very complicated interaction between the incoming mostly uniform swarm of particles from the sun, the Earth's magnetic field, and the Earth's upper atmosphere. The streams, once formed, follow the direction of the geomagnetic field. – S. McGrew Sep 26 '19 at 14:44
  • I would suggest editing the brief comment describing the formation of these "streams" into your answer. I think the (rough) mechanism to how the streams form is essential to the answer (and I do not understand that process myself :-) ). – StephenG - Help Ukraine Sep 26 '19 at 15:44
  • 2
    Good suggestion; done. – S. McGrew Sep 26 '19 at 16:09
  • 1
    Edit much appreciated. – StephenG - Help Ukraine Sep 26 '19 at 20:12
  • Quick note: The particles responsible for generating the auroral lights come from the geomagnetic tail. It is likely that some of them originated at the Sun in the past, but it's impossible to trace the origin of any given electron, obviously. – honeste_vivere Jan 24 '22 at 14:18