Northern lights, timelapse - 4K stock video

Timelapse footage of the Aurora Borealis, or northern lights, using a fish-eye lens. Auroral displays are caused by interactions between energetic charged particles from the Sun, and the Earth's atmosphere. Moving at 400-500 kilometres a second, the charged particles of the solar wind are drawn by Earth's magnetic field to the poles, where they collide with gas atoms and molecules, causing them to emit light. Green light is from oxygen atoms, purple light from nitrogen atoms. Filmed in Minnesota, USA, on 5th September.
Timelapse footage of the Aurora Borealis, or northern lights, using a fish-eye lens. Auroral displays are caused by interactions between energetic charged particles from the Sun, and the Earth's atmosphere. Moving at 400-500 kilometres a second, the charged particles of the solar wind are drawn by Earth's magnetic field to the poles, where they collide with gas atoms and molecules, causing them to emit light. Green light is from oxygen atoms, purple light from nitrogen atoms. Filmed in Minnesota, USA, on 5th September.
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DETAILS

Creative #:
901598960
License type:
Collection:
Verve+
Max file size:
3840 x 2160 px - 1 GB
Clip length:
00:00:19:26
Upload date:
Location:
Minnesota, United States
Release info:
No release required
Mastered to:
QuickTime 8-bit Photo-JPEG 4K 3840x2160 30p