Can you see the aurora anywhere in the Arctic Circle?
In fact, the Northern Lights can be seen in many places, only near the Arctic Circle, such as the four Nordic countries, Russia, Alaska, Canada and Greenland.
The most popular destinations for the winter aurora tour are the four Nordic countries, Finland, Denmark, Norway and Iceland. Among the four countries, we can't say which country has the best aurora, mainly depending on the index of aurora burst.
The northern lights are not available all year round. In the northern hemisphere, they only appear around winter. But even in winter, things don't happen or can be seen every day. This is difficult to explain scientifically. For tourists, it depends on their personality.
There are many explanations about the formation of aurora since ancient times, including Shanhaiguan in China. But most of the ancient explanations are related to myths, and modern science gives scientific explanations. The high-energy charged particle flow (solar wind) from the earth's magnetosphere or the sun excites (or ionizes) molecules or atoms in the upper atmosphere.
Take Finland as an example to pursue the Northern Lights. A friend left a week earlier than me and stayed in Luo, Finland for a week. I didn't see any aurora, but I saw the aurora all over the sky on the first night of my arrival in Romania, and it was a 5-level aurora burst index. This kind of personality is really difficult to explain by science.
Listening to Angela Zhang's Aurora a long time ago, I had an infinite yearning for the Northern Lights. "Love is such a wonderful light that it guides the future we want. The magical prophecy of the Northern Lights, hurry to find incredible love ... "Until the day I set foot in the Arctic Circle, the Northern Lights sung in the original song really existed, and the dreamy beauty was suffocating.