Thu. Nov 21st, 2024
Occasional Digest - a story for you

Justin Chambers has been chasing the aurora australis for over a decade, and he’s now in one of the best places in the world to find them.

The chef turned amateur photographer spends a large part of his year at Mawson Station, in the Australian Antarctic Territory.

As the sun enters the solar maximum — the period of greatest solar activity during its 11-year solar cycle — Mr Chambers said he has witnessed the best aurora of his life, and managed to get it on camera.

Purple and green auroral lights in bands across the sky with the explosives container at Mawson Station
Bands of auroral lights play across the sky on East Arm, Antarctica.(Supplied: Justin Chambers)

“Having chased them for so long, I find the beauty in everything, but seeing these … I’ve never experienced anything quite like it,” he said.

“Colours I’ve only dreamed of.

“I’ve never really seen pink, I’ve seen red and green, there was a hint of blue, we had purples and we had oranges.”

What causes an aurora in the first place?

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