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Northern Lights Set to Dazzle the UK for a Second Night

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If you have woken up on Saturday morning well rested but filled with regret over missing the Northern Lights – don’t worry. They’re set to return tonight.

On Friday night, the lights dazzled the country, and the internet was awash with photos of bright pinks, purples and greens splashed across the night sky.

Here is everything you need to know about how to catch them on Saturday night. Just as on Friday night, the Northern Lights are set to light up the skies all across the UK.

That means you have a chance to see it no matter where you are, as long as the skies are clear (which is looking likely).

On Friday, we saw pictures from Inverness to Kent, and Omagh to Angelsey to Norwich, so it truly is a nation-wide spectacle.

Ordinarily, somewhere away from light pollution with a clear view of the night sky has the best opportunity to see the lights, but based on Friday night, that didn’t matter.

For Saturday night, the Met Office says there’s a good chance of sightings across Scotland, Northern Ireland and parts of northern England and Wales in particular.

Aurora activity is expected again across the UK and while the geomagnetic storm is still expected to be in the ‘strong’ category, early indications are that it may not reach the ‘extreme’ of last night with activity declining.

Weather conditions are ideal with clear skies but it needs to be dark, so you’ll need to wait until at least 10:30pm.

At this time of year, when nights are shorter, 11:30pm into the early hours of the morning is when the night is darkest.

The activity of the lights itself is more unpredictable, the Met Office says, so expect it to ebb and flow with different colours in different places at different times.

On Friday night, our BBC Weather Watchers captured the magic with more than 3,000 photographs sent into us between 21:00 and 1:00 on Saturday morning. Given the lights are not expected to be as bright as they were on Friday, you may need to employ some camera tricks to get the most out of your photo if you are heading out on Saturday night.

If you have a newer iPhone model, you will want to switch on night mode, though it may do this by itself. All phone users will want to play with the exposure to capture the best of the lights – most phones will bring up this option by tapping the screen when in the camera app.

The last time we had an extreme geomagnetic storm hit Earth was in 2003, so Friday’s event was rare. We are much more used to seeing the Northern Lights limited to northern parts of the UK.

There have been more occasions in the last year or so where we have seen a weak showing of the aurora in southern parts of the UK.

This is because in the Sun‘s 11 year solar cycle, we are approaching the ‘solar maximum’, where there are naturally more sunspots on the Sun’s surface. Sunspots are like huge volcanos erupting charged particles in Coronal Mass Ejections (CMEs).

With more of them at the moment, there is a greater chance of more frequent and strong auroral activity.

It is also worth pointing out that because we can forecast these events better and with most of us having a smart phone able to capture the bright lights of the aurora, there has been an increase in sightings over the last decade or two.

Rachel Adams

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