Polar Light
Polar light, also known as an aurora, is a natural light in the sky caused by the interaction of earth’s magnetic field with particles from the sun. It is normally seen in polar regions and at night. When coming from the north polar lights are known as Aurora Borealis, Borealis for north wind, or the Northern Lights.
While being seen best closer to the poles, polar lights can be seen all over the world from time to time and even on other planets, and are also many different colors. They show up as glows or curtains of color.
Green, blue, and red are common colors for auroras. Charged particles from the sun come to the magnetic poles of the earth and they collide with atoms of oxygen and nitrogen. Oxygen tends to give a green or brownish-red color while nitrogen gives a red or blue color. Altitude has a huge influence in the color of polar lights. At high altitudes the oxygen causes a red light. Lower down the oxygen will give a green light and the nitrogen will give a blue and red light. Then finally there is lower down when only the blue and red from the nitrogen is seen. The most common color for an aurora is green, followed by pink which is a mixture of the green and red colors. The rarest color of aurora is the red light which is caused by a collision only 200 miles (320 km) above the earth! (more…)

International Polar Year, also known as IPY, is a global and collaborative campaign with the focus of researching Polar Regions. The research efforts are intense and seek to discover and gain knowledge about the earth’s Polar Regions, how and why they change, and how the Polar Regions and its changes affect the overall health of the biosphere. The program is planned now by both the international Council for Science (ICSU) and the World Meteorological Organization (WMO). Since the First Polar Year, there have been three other Polar Years in 1932-1933 (Second International Polar Year), 1957-1958 (International Geophysical Year), and the most recent in 2007-2009 (Third International Polar Year).
The Northern Lights is an impressive natural phenomenon. But it does not stand alone. There is a connection with Nov. 9, the day of the descent of the foremothers of the earth as described in Goethe’s Faust, at Pentecost, the Feast of the inner fire, the Kalevala, the Finnish epic, and Rembrandt’s painting The Polish Rider. Theodor Däubler Also, a little-known poet, let himself be inspired by the aurora. However diverse these connections may be, two things in common: their focus on the light and the future.
Aurora occurs when charged particles from the Sun disrupt the Earth’s magnetic field, and thus can penetrate the atmosphere. Usually, the charged particles deflected by the magnetic field into space, and that protects us.
The polar bear is the biggest bear of all. This bear is found only in the Arctic. He eats almost only meat because there is little or no plants in the Arctic area. The polar bear probably dates from the brown bear.