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 NASA Satellites Discover What Powers Northern Lights Thursday, 24 July,
2008 11:00 PM
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 "NASA News" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
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"NASA News" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
 July 24, 2008

Dwayne Brown
Headquarters, Washington
202-358-1726
[EMAIL PROTECTED]<http://in.mc947.mail.yahoo.com/mc/[EMAIL PROTECTED]>

Laura Layton
Goddard Space Flight Center, Md.
301-286-8170
[EMAIL PROTECTED]<http://in.mc947.mail.yahoo.com/mc/[EMAIL PROTECTED]>

RELEASE: 08-185

NASA SATELLITES DISCOVER WHAT POWERS NORTHERN LIGHTS

GREENBELT, Md. -- Researchers using a fleet of five NASA satellites
have discovered that explosions of magnetic energy a third of the way
to the moon power substorms that cause sudden brightenings and rapid
movements of the aurora borealis, called the Northern Lights.

The culprit turns out to be magnetic reconnection, a common process
that occurs throughout the universe when stressed magnetic field
lines suddenly snap to a new shape, like a rubber band that's been
stretched too far.

"We discovered what makes the Northern Lights dance," said Dr.
Vassilis Angelopoulos of the University of California, Los Angeles.
Angelopoulos is the principal investigator for the Time History of
Events and Macroscale Interactions during Substorms mission, or
THEMIS.

Substorms produce dynamic changes in the auroral displays seen near
Earth's northern and southern magnetic poles, causing a burst of
light and movement in the Northern and Southern Lights.

Substorms often accompany intense space storms that can disrupt radio
communications and global positioning system signals and cause power
outages. Solving the mystery of where, when, and how substorms occur
will allow scientists to construct more realistic substorm models and
better predict a magnetic storm's intensity and effects.

"As they capture and store energy from the solar wind, the Earth's
magnetic field lines stretch far out into space. Magnetic
reconnection releases the energy stored within these stretched
magnetic field lines, flinging charged particles back toward the
Earth's atmosphere," said David Sibeck, THEMIS project scientist at
NASA's Goddard Space Flight Center in Greenbelt, Md. "They create
halos of shimmering aurora circling the northern and southern poles."

Scientists directly observe the beginning of substorms using five
THEMIS satellites and a network of 20 ground observatories located
throughout Canada and Alaska. Launched in February 2007, the five
identical satellites line up once every four days along the equator
and take observations synchronized with the ground observatories.
Each ground station uses a magnetometer and a camera pointed upward
to determine where and when an auroral substorm will begin.
Instruments measure the auroral light from particles flowing along
Earth's magnetic field and the electrical currents these particles
generate.

During each alignment, the satellites capture data that allow
scientists to precisely pinpoint where, when, and how substorms
measured on the ground develop in space. On Feb. 26, 2008, during one
such THEMIS lineup, the satellites observed an isolated substorm
begin in space, while the ground-based observatories recorded the
intense auroral brightening and space currents over North America.

These observations confirm for the first time that magnetic
reconnection triggers the onset of substorms. The discovery supports
the reconnection model of substorms, which asserts a substorm
starting to occur follows a particular pattern. This pattern consists
of a period of reconnection, followed by rapid auroral brightening
and rapid expansion of the aurora toward the poles. This culminates
in a redistribution of the electrical currents flowing in space
around Earth.

THEMIS is the fifth medium-class mission under NASA's Explorer
Program. The program, managed by the Explorers Program Office at
Goddard provides frequent flight opportunities for world-class space
investigations in heliophysics and astrophysics. The University of
California, Berkeley's Space Sciences Laboratory in Berkeley, Calif.,
managed the project development and is currently operating the THEMIS
mission. ATK Space (formerly Swales Aerospace) of Beltsville, Md.,
built the THEMIS satellites.

The THEMIS team's findings will appear online July 24 in Science
Express and Aug. 14 in the journal science. For more information
about the THEMIS mission, visit:
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