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Listen: You Can Hear The Northern Lights, Researchers Say

The northern lights over Tromsoe, northern Norway, on Jan. 24, 2012.
Rune Stoltz Bertinussen
/
AFP/Getty Images
The northern lights over Tromsoe, northern Norway, on Jan. 24, 2012.

It sounds to us like someone's banging on a pipe. Others think it's like a clap.

Either way, it's kind of cool that researchers from Finland's Aalto University say they've confirmed something that's long been the stuff of folktales:

The northern lights do make noises that can be heard down on the ground.

There's video — with sound — supporting their case.

What the researchers still haven't figured out, they concede, is "how the auroral sounds are created."

They add that:

"The recorded, unamplified sounds can be similar to crackles or muffled bangs which last for only a short period of time. Other people who have heard the auroral sounds have described them as distant noise and sputter.

"Because of these different descriptions, researchers suspect that there are several mechanisms behind the formation of these auroral sounds. These sounds are so soft that one has to listen very carefully to hear them and to distinguish them from the ambient noise."

This gives us a reason to repost some amazing video from Minnesota (there's no sound on this one).

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Mark Memmott is NPR's supervising senior editor for Standards & Practices. In that role, he's a resource for NPR's journalists – helping them raise the right questions as they do their work and uphold the organization's standards.
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