Rare sighting of the aurora lights up Tysoe Windmill - The Stratford Observer

Rare sighting of the aurora lights up Tysoe Windmill

THOSE with their eyes to the skies in on Sunday night (February 26) may have caught a very rare sighting of the Northern Lights.

The aurora was caught on camera by photographer Nigel Wilkins, spectacularly lighting up the sky around Tysoe Windmill.

Though it was difficult to see the kaleidoscopic colours with the naked eye due to light pollution, Nigel explained on his facebook page – https://www.facebook.com/photographybynigelwilkins – the light show in all its technicolour was visible using a camera lens.

It was possible to see the aurora’s movement across the sky without equipment.




An aurora is formed by a solar flare erupting on the Sun, sending charged particles towards Earth which interact with our atmosphere.

The northern lights are more often seen in Scotland but rarely in more southern parts of the UK.


On Sunday night there were sightings across the country including in Northern Ireland, south Wales and Norfork, as well as right here in Warwickshire.

The Sun goes through an 11-year solar cycle measured in terms of how active its magnetic field is. As this magnetic field changes, so does the amount of activity on the Sun’s surface.

The last solar minimum was in 2020, so activity on the Sun has been increasing since then and it is currently the most active since 2014.

Solar maximum is expected in 2025 and more frequent displays of the aurora are likely in the coming years.

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