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Oct 11, 2021 16 tweets 7 min read Read on X
(1/16) Ever wondered about the different colours and types of Aurora phenomena? I have shot a lot over the years so thought I would do a thread on Aurora types. I will start with the classic overhead green aurora. These next few shots were taken during a G3 (KP7) solar storm.
(2/16) Green forms between 100–250 km altitude as oxygen atoms become excited as they interact with the the solar wind and emitting light at 557.7nm. In strong solar storms where the aurora is overhead green dominates as it is so much brighter due to proximity to the viewer.
(3/16) Above green can be bands of other colours. 2nd most common is the red/pink that forms at around 250–500km altitude from oxygen atoms emitting light at 630nm. Still oxygen atoms but but at a different covalence state due to the higher temperatures found at higher altitudes.
(4/16) The above shot shows both the green and red/pink bands. But in rare cases when observing a strong aurora from a distance and terrain blocks most of the green you can see just the red band. This is then called a "blood aruora".
(5/16) Note higher altitude band can sometimes be seen overhead also if there are gaps in the green band below. These were taken also in large G3 (KP) solar storm.
(6/16). Above the red band you can on very rare occasions get a blue/purple fringe that comes from the interaction of the solar wind with hydrogen and helium in the ionosphere (well above 500km). In this shot you can see green and red bands then the blue/purple band above.
(7/16) The green band in the shot above actually has a yellowish tinge. When looking at the auroral oval from a long way away the shallow angle of observation causes the green and red bands to overlap generating a dirty green or yellow. Light scattering adds to the red shift.
(8/16) The Southern Lights are also seen this way due to distances of the observer to the Aurora (unless in Antarctica). The shot below (from Tasmania) should not be calibrated to vivid green like the Northern Lights (same way the setting sun should not be recalibrated white)
(9/16) Below the green aurora (<95km) the density of molecules stops oxygen emitting light. It is technically possible in extreme storms to see a low altitude fringe of blue or red below the green layer from Nitrogen atoms either in its ionised or excited states respectively.
(10/16) 'Steve' is a phenomenon distinct from typical auroras, the POES-17 satellite detected no charged particles impacting with the ionosphere during the Steve event which was studied. This means that is likely produced by an entirely different yet unknown mechanism.
(11/16) 'Steve' seems to be related to a band of fast-moving ions and super-hot electrons passing through the ionosphere. It runs perpendicular to the normal Auroa at mid latitudes and often generates it's own green picket fence Aurora next to it.
(12/16). Steve is only now being characterised by science. I managed to capture Steve in a time-lapse at a remote hike in location over Berg Lake. You can clearly see the picket fence aurora here with Steve (the purple band) above it.
(13/16)
With the quality of data produced I co-authored a physics paper with a team from University of Saskatchewan, University of Western Ontario, NASA,GSFC, The New Jersey Institute of Technology, University of Calgary and Alberta Aurora Chasers.
(14/16) The work was able to determine Steve’s optical emissions ranged from 130-270km in altitude and the picket fence’s emissions ranging from 95-150 km altitude. Raw time-lapse used below. More into at peakd.com/photography/@i…
(15/16) Thanks for sticking with this thread! If you would like support my Aurora work please RT the thread. I have the rare blue/purple Aurora shot I talked about which was taken at 54 North in Canada up @withFND for 1ETH foundation.app/@intrepidphoto…
(16/16) Last one to finish. This is the coldest shot I have taken. With windchill temps were -50C (-58F). I had issues with my eyelids freezing shut and had to use handwarmers on my eyes to see while snowshoeing back home. 😳

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More from @intrepid_p

Nov 25, 2023
1/34 My small family spent two years of our lives essentially stateless, stranded at sea, 18,000km from home, floating on 40ft of fiberglass. 'Freedom to transact' literally became a matter of life or death. This is our story👇
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2/34 Australia locked its citizens out from returning during the pandemic. My family (wife and three kids 3, 5 and 6 months old) were sailing on a catamaran in the eastern Caribbean at the time. We ended up there for two years waiting out the pandemic. Image
3/34 When the pandemic hit, we essentially became stateless. For a time, all countries within sailing distance closed their borders to Australian-flagged vessels. No flights or cruise ships. My son couldn't renew his passport, and we had to get him temporary (refugee) papers. Image
Read 34 tweets
Nov 7, 2023
1/10 During the pandemic, we weren't the only souls adrift at sea. As nations closed their doors, the horizon was dotted with the spectral presence of ghost ships - immense cargo carriers, tankers, and cruise liners. Image
2/10 They floated aimlessly in international waters or remained anchored at a distance from harbours; some were manned by bare-minimum crews while others echoed a chilling emptiness.
3/10 The pandemic-induced lockdowns, shuttered ports, and dwindling demand for goods and fuel forced these vessels into an unforeseen standstill. They became trapped, either by customs and quarantine protocols or by economic constraints.
Read 10 tweets
Mar 29, 2023
1/35 Why is 'Freedom to Transact' so vital? Why I am I committed to spread the msg via memes such as @punk6529's ? I spent two years of my life essentially stateless, stranded at sea, 18,000km from home, floating on 40ft of fiberglass; freedom to transact became life or death.
2/35 Australia locked it citizens out from returning during the pandemic. My family (wife and three kids 3,5 and 6 months old) were sailing on a catamaran in the eastern Caribbean at the time. We ended up there for two years waiting out the pandemic.
3/35 When the pandemic hit; we essentially became stateless. For a time all countries within sailing distance closed their borders to Australian flagged vessels. No flights or cruse ships. My youngest son could not renew his passport and we had to get temporary (refugee) papers.
Read 35 tweets
Mar 3, 2023
1/37 Twenty five years of adventure photography. I, have been published by high quality traditional houses including National Geographic and Lonely Planet, exhibited in galleries around the world, and have sold 89 1/1s (85Ξ in NFT trading volume) since May 2021. Info 👇
2/37 IntrepidPhotos has a focus on remote locations and rare phenomena. Photos have been used as the basis for a scientific paper characterising a rare phenomena, National Park magazine covers and remote National Geographic Traveller locations.
3/37 One of the earliest photographic brands on the web intrepidphotos.com was registered in 2001. It was considered a sufficiently important part of the early internet to be archived by Internet Archive and can be seen on the web.archive.org.
Read 37 tweets
Nov 11, 2022
1/13 Two years on a cold dark crusade documenting 'Steve'. 50 long nights awake in remote frozen wastelands with temperatures as low as -40C (-40F). The time for Steve to come to @SuperRare has arrived. Let me explain why this purple ribbon is so special, why it's so important👇
2/13 What is Steve? Most have never heard of it; those that have might just think it's an Aurora. Steve is an east/west phenomena at lower latitudes than you typically see an Aurora. It is caused by a 25km wide ribbon of hot plasma at 3000C, flowing at a speed of 6 km/s. Image
3/13 While occurring with the space weather that brings an Aurora; Steve is not an Aurora as it is not generated through through the precipitation of electrons. Steve runs East/West while an auroral beams runs North/South along the magnetitic field lines to the poles.
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Read 13 tweets

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