Aurora: Lights of Wonder
REAL-TIME Aurora for Planetarium
Experience the northern lights in breathtaking clarity with Aurora: Lights of Wonder—the world’s first 4K X 4K real time virtual reality fulldome show. Captured under Arctic skies, this immersive experience reveals the motion, science, and beauty of the aurora like never before.

Stories about Aurora
Some Indigenous peoples of North America believed that these glowing veils were the spirits of departed children, ancestors, and warriors.

In medieval times, peasants trembled with fear, believing that the strange light was an omen of war, or perhaps the heavenly glow was a message from God.


Science of Aurora
The Sun sends us more than heat and light. It also sends small charged particles our way. The protective magnetic field around Earth shields us from most of the particles.
Some particles move along the magnetic field, toward the polar regions. When these particles collide with molecules in the upper atmosphere, they release the light of the aurora.
Auroras are not unique to Earth. Any planet with an atmosphere may have auroras. The gas giant planet Jupiter has auroras. An ultrasensitive navigation camera on NASA’s Juno spaceraft has caught Jupiter’s aurora.
Scientists have found that the number of sunspots varies with an approximate 11-year cycle. When solar activity reaches its peak years, the largest numbers of sunspots appear, and sunspot eruptions occur more frequently energizing the most powerful auroral storms of the cycle.
NASA scientists discovered how auroral storms develop with a group of five satellites called THEMIS. Their measurements showed that the Earth’s magnetic field lines sometimes snap and reconnect triggering the most colorful Northern light displays.

