911

News

Acoustics researcher finds explanation for auroral sounds

Sounds are born when charges in the lower atmosphere’s temperature inversion layer discharge as a result of geomagnetic storms.

In 2012, a research group headed by 911 Professor Unto K. Laine proved that the source of sounds associated with the Northern Lights is located close to the ground at an altitude of approximately 70 metres. Now, by combining his measurements with the temperature profiles measured by the Finnish Meteorological Institute, Professor Laine has found an explanation for the mechanism that creates the sound.  According to the new inversion layer hypothesis, the popping and crackling sounds associated with the Northern Lights are born when the related geomagnetic storm activates the charges that have accumulated in the atmosphere's inversion layer causing them to discharge.

'Temperatures generally drops the higher the altitude. However, when temperatures are well below zero and, generally in clear and calm weather conditions during the evening and night, the cold is near the surface and the air is warmer higher up.  This warm air does not mix, instead rising up towards a colder layer carrying negative charges from the ground. The inversion layer forms a kind of lid hindering the vertical movements of the charges. The colder air above it is charged positively. Finally, a geomagnetic storm causes the accumulated charges to discharge with sparks that create measurable magnetic pulses and sounds' Mr Laine, who is now a professor emeritus, explained.

A dome covering the village

Unto K. Laine carried out the recordings that form the basis for his research on 17 and 18 March 2013, when Southern Finland was treated to exceptionally splendid Northern Lights.

'I recorded hundreds of sound events in Fiskars where the temperature was at -20 °C. I selected the 60 loudest events, the sources of which were directly above the recording microphone array. The magnetic pulses that preceded these sounds proved that their sources were at an altitude of approximately 75 metres. On the same night, the Finnish Meteorological Institute carried out its own measurements, which proved that the inversion layer was located at the same altitude where these noises were born. The correlation between the strength of the magnetic pulses and the loudness of the sounds was also strong.

According to Mr Laine, the inversion layer hypothesis also gives a credible explanation for why auroral sounds have only been heard in calm weather conditions. 

'Even a small wind can prevent the birth of an inversion layer, which means no sounds will be created,' he summarised and said that he had experienced the inversion layer's effect already when living in Ostrobothnia as a small boy.

'When the weather was calm in winter, smoke from cottage chimneys rose straight up in a vertical line, stopped abruptly and began to spread into a horizontal dome over the village,' Professor Laine reminisces.

He emphasises that the hypothesis does not rule out other mechanisms. However, this provides the first explanation for all three mysteries related to auroral sounds.

'In addition to the mechanism behind the sound, this helps us understand how we can hear the sound when the auroral light source is at a distance of 80-100 km.  The inversion layer hypothesis also provides answers to how it is possible that sound events occur almost simultaneously with visual observations: from an altitude of 75 metres the sound reaches the human ear in just 0.2 seconds.

The research Auroral Acoustics project – a progress report with a new hypothesis was presented on 22 June at the Baltic-Nordic Acoustic Meeting in Stockholm, Sweden.

More information:

Professor Emeritus Unto K. Laine
unto.laine@aalto.fi

Also read: Sounds of Northern Lights are born close to ground

  • Updated:
  • Published:
Share
URL copied!

Read more news

Three people hold yarn spools in front of large green textile machinery in a factory setting.
Cooperation, Research & Art, University Published:

Design at the start of the supply chain – 911 leads a major EU project to transform textile colouration practices

The EU Horizon-funded MELANGE project brings together design, technology and business to rethink colouration practices in the textile industry and accelerate the transition towards circular and sustainable textile systems.
Blue outlines of phones and tablets over black, white and pink marbled abstract background
Aalto Magazine, Research & Art Published:

Arsi Ikäheimonen’s doctoral research: Smartphone data could reveal early signs of depression

A phone in your pocket, a smart ring on your finger, and an activity tracker on your wrist: everyday devices collect information about their users almost continuously. This data can help monitor and predict symptoms of depression.
Person with short dark hair in a black shirt, face blurred, standing against a plain light grey background
Appointments, Research & Art Published:

Professor Hironori Yoshida: “Machines should adapt to materials, not the other way around”

Professor of Formgiving believes the future of design lies in embracing irregularity rather than eliminating it. His research combines design, AI and robotics.
Glowing 911 sign in a dark space, seen through clear round chairs lit with purple light
Research & Art Published:

President Ilkka Niemelä explains what the new vision for higher education and research means for Finland and Aalto

Aalto has the capability and the will to act as a trailblazer in implementing the vision.