Thursday, 14 November 2013

Why is there lightning and thunder?

Why is there lightning and thunder?

Ans: Lightning is electricity. In effect, positive charges and negative charges collect in different parts of a cloud — no one really knows exactly how. When enough charges collect, there is a bolt of lightning as the electricity travels between areas of opposite charge. Lightning can flow between clouds or from the cloud to the ground. The lightning jumps through the air, heating the air and making it expand. The air then quickly contracts again as it cools. This movement of air makes the sound wave called thunder. 

 


Tuesday, 12 November 2013

How do auroras work?

How do auroras work?
Ans: Auroras have signified different things to different cultures. The Vikings thought that auroras were reflections off the armor of the mythical Valkyries. To the native Eskimos of Greenland and nearby Canada, auroras were communications from the dead. To American Indians, they were lights from huge campfires far to the north. In medieval times, auroras were omens of war or disasters, such as plague. Today, we know that they're a light phenomenon caused by high-energy particles from the sun's solar winds interacting with the Earth's magnetic field. However, knowing the physical reason for auroras certainly doesn't detract from these beautiful natural light shows.

Because auroras are caused by the interaction of solar winds with the Earth's magnetic field, you can see them most often near the poles, both north and south. In the north, they're called aurora borealis, or Northen lights. Auroras is the name of the Roman goddess of the dawn, and "boreal" means "north" in Latin. In the southern hemisphere, auroras are called auroras australis (Latin for "south").

Auroras follow solar cycles and tend to be more frequent in the late autumn and early spring (October, February and March are the best months for seeing them). Around the Arctic Circle in northern Norway and Alaska, you can see them almost nightly. As you travel south, their frequency diminishes. Around southern Alaska, southern Norway, Scotland and the United Kingdom, they might show up about one to 10 times per month. Near the United States/Canada border, you may see them two to four times a year. Once or twice a century, they might pop up in the southern United States, Mexico and the equatorial regions.

http://youtu.be/Ezobpz55EEY

http://youtu.be/s-Qf0rr0fBs

http://youtu.be/ca1UDLdrrOA

Monday, 11 November 2013

Why is the sky blue?

Why is the sky blue?
Ans:  The colors in sunlight, the angle at which solar illumination travels through the atmosphere, the size of airborne particles and atmospheric molecules, and the way our eyes perceive color.
From: science.howstuffworks.com