July 2004
Aurora Gallery
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Summary: On July 24th, a weak coronal mass ejection from giant sunspot 652 buffeted Earth's magnetic field. The CME itself didn't trigger a strong geomagnetic storm, but the high-speed solar wind in the CME's wake did. The storm was fueled by a south-pointing interplanetary magnetic field. See also the May-June 2004 aurora gallery.

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Unless otherwise stated, all images are copyrighted by the photographers.


  Photographer, Location Images Comments

Dave Hughes,
West of Edmonton, Alberta Canada
Jul. 25
#1, #2, #3, #4

Fantastic display which I observed for over four hours, covering the entire sky at times. Canon Digital Rebel, 10 - 13 seconds ISO800

Chris Graham,
Estevan, Saskatchewan
Jul. 25
#1, #2, #3, more

I'd read on spaceweather.com that there was a chance for northern lights, so I went 10 minutes north of town and parked with some friends. The lights were tame unitl midnight - then they went crazy, dancing across the entrie sky, all the way south. We drank beer, took pics, and enjoyed the show that went strong for 2 hours. Canon 10D, 800 ISO, 10s exp, f4.0, off-camera flash

Stan Richard,
Little Wall Lake, Jewell, Iowa, USA
Jul. 24
#1, #2, #3, more

I treated my daughters to their very first northern lights show last nite, they were quite pleased. It was fun to watch the display and listen to them 'wow' repeatedly. Photos taken with Canon Digital Rebel.

Robert Berdan,
My backyard in Calgary, Alberta, Canada.
Jul. 24
#1, more

Taken with a digital camera, Fuji S2, set at ISO 1600 28 mm F2.8 lens - 8 seconds exposure. Surrounded by city lights!

Fernand Laplante,
Mont Cosmos Québec/ Canada
Jul. 24
#1, #2

Caméra 300 D Canon 1600 ASA 20 Sec.

Matt Russell,
Crosslake, MN
Jul. 24
#1, #2, #3, #4, more

Taken with a Canon 10D @ ISO 800, f4.5 and 30 second exposures. The structures were changing so fast, you could become dizzy quite easily.

Carol Lakomiak,
Tomahawk WI, USA 45N//89W
Jul. 24
#1, #2

Beautiful display! Visual green, red and occasional violet were seen, with lots of wave like pulsations shooting up past the zenith. Nikon CP4300, 400 ISO, 15-30 seconds. Nice to see the Lights again.

Lyndon Anderson,
15 miles north of Bismarck, North Dakota, USA
Jul. 24
#1, #2, more

Cool show - my third night in a row of observations (the previous two were in extreme northern Minnesota while on vacation). Pentax IST D digital camera, Sigma 20 mm lens (1.8 aperature) & 8-12 second exposures.

Russell Pickering,
This was taken on the Yellowstone Highway about 23 miles east of the East Gate near a rock formation called Holy City. Wapiti, Wyoming is the nearest little town.
Jul. 25
#1, more

Look closely and you'll see the Big Dipper. This was around 3:00 am when the Dipper was near the horizon. This photo was taken with a Canon 10D, F4.5, 100 ISO, 30 seconds, 28mm.

Lorie Giebel,
Eagle River, WI.
Jul. 24
#1, #2, #3

Huge display starting at dusk, lasted all night. Definately a storm, as it was flashing overhead from north to south. 20mm lens, 25 sec., Canon 10D.

 

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