The northern lights are spectacular this year, but the strongest are still to come

David Williams

Dave Williams is an accomplished travel photographer, writer, and best-selling author from the UK. He is also a photography educator and published Aurora expert. Dave has traveled extensively in recent years, capturing stunning images from around the world in a modified van. His work has been featured in various publications and he has worked with notable brands such as Skoda, EE, Boeing, Huawei, Microsoft, BMW, Conde Nast, Electronic Arts, Discovery, BBC, The Guardian, ESPN, NBC, and many others.

The northern lights have hit headlines lately as solar flares have sent charged plasma hurtling through space at break-neck speeds. We’ve had reports of aurora being visible at seriously low latitudes, including Luxembourg. There’s a reason for this, and any nighttime photographers need to know what’s going on.

I’ve written a book about the northern lights. It’s a huge passion of mine and I’ve made it my mission to educate myself on nature’s greatest light show as much as I possibly can. I was lucky enough to have spent the past winter travelling throughout the Arctic in my van. I witnessed the aurora on an almost nightly basis and enhanced my knowledge through research and observation. While I love to dive into the science and the technicalities, I’ll spare you those details in favour of the more exciting stuff.

Long story short, the sun is an angry ball of helium plasma that has very explosive mood swings. When it erupts, solar flares spew this plasma out into space at speeds we can’t even fathom. Some of these flares, or CMEs (Coronal Mass Ejections), are pointed straight to us on Earth. Like magnets, the earth’s poles attract plasma, whereas the equator repels it. The plasma interacts with the elements in our ionosphere, way up from 50km up to around 200km above our heads, and the reactions emit energy in the form of light. Voila, an aurora happens.

But here’s the thing. The mood swings the sun has are a very real thing. Our sun goes through its solar cycle every 11 years. This enormous, electrically charged ball of energetic plasma is on its way up from a solar minimum to a solar maximum. We are currently in solar cycle 25, which is expected to peak somewhere between 2023 and 2026. What this means for aurora chasers is that the stunning northern (and southern) lights displays we’ve seen lately are ramping up. They’re set to continue next year and likely for a couple of years after that.

To see and shoot the aurora is quite simple. The problem is, that it’s also the result of a very specific set of circumstances aligning. We need dark, clear skies. We need solar activity. We need the Earth’s magnetic field to be just right. These sound like small things, but with just one of them being off we won’t get our shot. If you want to see and shoot the aurora, take advantage of this rise in solar activity, which is giving us regular solar flares and resulting in quite frequent solar storms.

The northern lights season is coming to a close for 2022, but while we still observe ‘night’ in terms of the true definition, we will still see the northern light. The southern lights season is opening and I for one cannot wait to see what images come from the south this year before September sees the northern sky light up again.

The point, as I’m sure you’ve figured out, is that if you want to see and shoot the northern lights, get planning and achieve that dream during this solar maximum. The skies are alive with energy, ready for you to create captivating images and make life-long memories.

The true northern lights season in Canada, Iceland, northern Norway, Sweden and Finland, runs from mid-September until late March. These are the times when the skies are darkest. The shoulder seasons tend to have fairer weather, but mid-winter has the longest nights.


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David Williams

David Williams

Dave Williams is an accomplished travel photographer, writer, and best-selling author from the UK. He is also a photography educator and published Aurora expert. Dave has traveled extensively in recent years, capturing stunning images from around the world in a modified van. His work has been featured in various publications and he has worked with notable brands such as Skoda, EE, Boeing, Huawei, Microsoft, BMW, Conde Nast, Electronic Arts, Discovery, BBC, The Guardian, ESPN, NBC, and many others.

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6 responses to “The northern lights are spectacular this year, but the strongest are still to come”

  1. Abraham Avatar
    Abraham

    Hello David Williams, I have a question. I don’t know much about auroras besides what I read here. You mentioned that the sun goes thru cycles and that we’re currently on the 25th cycle. Also that there will be a peak between 2023 and 2026. My question is this, when we’re at the peak between 2023 and 2026. Is it super obvious when we’re at the peak that you can say “it isnt getting any better than this for the 11yr cycle” or is it more like peak years, maybe like 2 to 3 years, where it’s at its peak?

    1. Dave Williams Avatar

      The northern lights have never been more understood, however there remains a lot that we don’t know. The reason the solar cycle is labelled as the 25th is because it’s the 25th that’s been observed and recorded. The exact time of the peak, solar maximum, cannot be determined because it’ll happen when the sun (which behaves like a huge nuclear reactor) is ready for it to happen. We know that the intensity of the activity fluctuates and causes the minimums and maximums, and we know that it follows an 11 year cycle, but we can’t put too specific a time on it. I hope that helps.

      1. Abraham Avatar
        Abraham

        First of all, thank you for taking the time to reply. It means a lot. And it helped me understand a little more. And when you mentioned that the exact time can’t be determined because it’ll happen when the sun is ready for it to happen. I’m not too concerned with trying to figure out when it will happen, but rather when it does happen, will you, as someone who I’m assuming has taken pictures and have seen it personally, be able to tell that it’s a peak? Like will the lights be extra brighter? Or will you be able to see them for longer than usual, or just things that let you know that it isnt the usual light show. I hope im making myself clear. And thanks again for the reply.

        1. Kaouthia Avatar
          Kaouthia

          Here you go Abraham, this just popped up on my YT suggestions last night. This should help to answer some of your questions, too :)

          https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=85-p9EIEVUA

          1. Abraham Avatar
            Abraham

            This definitely answered my question. Ty. Im not all into this stuff. Its definitely fascinating and I would love to see them in real life. The reason im interested is because its a sign of something to come.

  2. JetSetJackieJ Avatar
    JetSetJackieJ

    Wishing to surprise my hubby for his 50th birthday and this is one of his bucket lists MUST DO. If this were your dad where and when would you book his ticket? I know Iceland and Norway would be idea… we would be flying from LAX. Any recommendation would be appreciative and amazing! Genuinely, Jackie