UAE’s Hope spacecraft has captured images of discrete auroras
- July 6, 2021
- Posted by: OptimizeIAS Team
- Category: DPN Topics
No Comments
UAE’s Hope spacecraft has captured images of discrete auroras
Subject : Geography
Context : Recently, the UAE’s Hope spacecraft has captured images of glowing atmospheric lights in the Red Planet’s night sky, known as discrete auroras.
Concept :
Phenomena of Auroras on Earth
- The Auroras are caused when charged particles ejected from the Sun’s surface, called the solar wind, enter the Earth’s atmosphere.
- The particles from solar wind are harmful, and our planet is protected by the geomagnetic field, which preserves life by shielding us from the solar wind.
- At the north and south poles, some of the solar wind particles are able to continuously stream down, and interact with different gases in the atmosphere to cause a display of light in the night sky.
- It is known as an aurora which is seen from the Earth’s high latitude regions (called the auroral oval), and is active all year round.
- In the northern part of our globe, the polar lights are called aurora borealis or Northern Lights, and are seen from the US (Alaska), Canada, Iceland, Greenland, Norway, Sweden and Finland.
- In the south, they are called aurora australis or southern lights, and are visible from high latitudes in Antarctica, Chile, Argentina, New Zealand and Australia.
Auroras in Mars
- Unlike Earth, which has a strong magnetic field, the Martian magnetic field has largely died out because the molten iron at the interior of the planet has cooled.
- The Martian crust, which hardened billions of years ago when the magnetic field still existed, retains some magnetism.
- In contrast with Earth, which acts like one single bar magnet, magnetism on Mars is unevenly distributed, with fields strewn across the planet and differing in direction and strength.
- The disjointed fields channel the solar wind to different parts of the Martian atmosphere, creating “discrete” auroras over the entire surface of the planet as charged particles interact with atoms and molecules in the sky.