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Dancing green hues of the northern lights captured from ISS | Trending

The beautiful natural phenomenon called the northern lights has mesmerised people since ages. Probably that is the reason, the videos or the images capturing the incredible green light always leave people amazed. Just like this video shared Nasa that shows the green hues of the northern lights from the International Space Station (ISS).

The image, taken from the viral Instagram video, shows the green hues of the northern lights.(Instagram/@nasa)

Nasa started the caption with a line from the song Yellow Coldplay. “Look how they shine for you,” they wrote. In the rest of the caption, the space agency explained more about what causes this beautiful natural phenomenon. “Auroras are natural light shows caused magnetic storms triggered the Sun’s activity like explosive flares and coronal mass ejections (ejected gas bubbles). Solar winds carry the energetically charged particles from these events to Earth’s atmosphere,” they added.
Also Read: NASA shares stunning picture of ‘jellyfish’ galaxy 800 million light-years away
“When these particles seep through Earth’s magnetosphere, a part of our atmosphere that protects us from solar and cosmic radiation, they cause substorms. These fast-moving substorm particles slam into our thin, high atmosphere, colliding with Earth’s oxygen and nitrogen particles. As these air particles shed the energy they picked up from the collision, each atom starts to glow in a different colour—causing the brilliant ribbons of light which weave across Earth’s northern or southern polar regions,” they further explained.
Take a look at the mesmerising video:

The post was shared about 18 hours ago. Since being shared, the video has gone viral. Till now, it has accumulated more than 9.8 million views and the numbers are only increasing. Additionally, the share has collected several likes and comments.Here’s how Instagram users reacted to the video:“Earth is freaking cool man,” expressed an Instagram user. “Nasa always comes with great videos and unique content,” shared another. “Wooowww cool,” commented a third. “How I love the universe,” posted a fourth. “It’s just wow,” wrote a fifth. Many showed their reactions through heart emoticons.Also Read: NASA’s Magellan Data discovers volcanic activity on Venus for the first time

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