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Stunning! Northern Lights illuminate the skies over York

This amazing sight greeted countless people from York and North Yorkshire who looked up last night.

The Northern Lights were visible and pictured from various parts of our area overnight (Sunday).

The picture above was posted by Yorkshire Profiles on X showing the lights over York

The Met Office said the lights were “observed across Scotland, clearly visible from Shetland webcams, and sightings reported across some central and eastern parts of England”.

Professor Don Pollacco, department of physics at the University of Warwick, said the phenomenon was caused by “the interaction of particles coming from the sun, the solar wind, with the Earth’s atmosphere – channelled to the polar regions by the Earth’s magnetic field.

The Northern Lights over York with the Starlink satellite train moving across the sky. Photograph: Yorkshire Profiles on X
‘With the ISS passing through. Yorkshire lavender’. Photograph: Colin Foster
Dunnington near York last night 7:30pm. Photograph: Jane Wainwright
Photograph: Em Mcgahan
Stearsby last night 7pm. Photograph: Julie Nash
Photograph: Michael Williamson
‘Sutton on the Forest taken by my mum’ – Amanda Faye
Kirkbymoorside. Photograph: Lauren Turnbull
Linton On Ouse. Photograph: Sally Duncalf
Just outside Pocklington. Photograph: Dan Chapman
Looking over Egton. Photograph: Anna Helm
Photograph: Dan Feather
Easingwold. Photograph: Deb Postill
Photograph: Lauren Turnbull

“It’s actually a bit like iron filings and the field of a bar magnetic.

“The solar wind contains more particles when there are sun spots, as these are regions on the sun’s surface where the magnetic field is interacting with the plasma in the sun, and the particles can be released.

“Once the particles are channelled into the Earth’s atmosphere they interact with molecules and have distinctive colours (eg oxygen molecules produce green light, nitrogen red light etc) and patterns such as light emissions that look like curtains or spotlights.

“These shapes change quickly over timescales of minutes/seconds.”