Aurora: In Search of the Northern Lights
H**W
An Amazing Journey!
The Aurora has always fascinated me. The Author combines her PhD in science and experiences from her travels to create a phenomenal fusion of hard science and fascinating Legends.Thoughtfully crafted to be understood by the layman while engaging the veteran scientist. Her passion for the aurora matches my deep love for the phenomena. Highly recommended!Enjoy
S**F
Great stuff: strongly recommended
Windridge spent two years traveling the northern hemisphere, researching the Aurora and the result is a spectacular mix of travelogue, historical context-setting, scientific expose and awe. Written for the lay reader, she provides testament to knowledge not interfering with our primal pre-rational connection to the world around us. If anything the book exposes 'wonder' as one of the strongest motivators in science. There are many scenes, culminating in the 2015 solar eclipse in Svalbard, that really bring the science and awe together and the reader is brought into the moment. Great stuff: strongly recommended.
M**N
Interesting and pitched at the right level for a person of non science background
I purchased the hard backed version of this book which I am pleased about as the cover photograph alone is worth keeping in good condition. This book is well written and as a person from a non science background, I found the level of detail and explanations pitched at the right level. It was an interesting and informative read that provided me with more than enough information to help me appreciate the Northern Lights and how very special they are. The book is written in an enthusiastic manner which is in keeping with the allure of the lights themselves. I would have appreciated seeing a few more photographs of the lights themselves, that said, pictures are easy to come by elsewhere whereas the information that is so well presented in this book is very valuable.
J**S
Very enjoyable and educational read
I enjoy taking photographs of the aurora in the UK and use various phone apps and user groups so that I know when to go out. This book, written by a plasma physicist, combines history, culture and physics in a most enjoyable manner. The chapters are divided into various locations in the North where the author went to research or see the lights so each one starts with a bit of travel/adventure/history and culture with the scientific info towards the end of each chapter. I learnt a lot and thought the level was just right for someone with an interest or some preceding knowledge of the aurora. This is not a picture book of glossy aurora photographs - there are just a few images of the authors travels, some good aurora pics credited to others and scientific diagrams. The author is just learning aurora photography and got her best pic so far in Scotland.If you want to know about the science, history and culture behind the aurora, this is a great book. It's not a coffee table picture book or a night photography guide and that's fine by me. Strongly recommended.
M**F
A great guide to the Northern Lights
Dr Melanie Windridge is a physicist, specialising in fusion research, and an adventurous traveller, at home in the world’s coldest places. These two interests come together in her fascination with the aurora borealis, the Northern Lights, those beautiful, enigmatic, dynamic light displays visible across northern latitudes. (There is an Antarctic equivalent, the Aurora Australis, but this is only visible to a few Antarctic residents)In her book, “Aurora: In search if the Northern Lights”, Melanie visits many places where the aurora is visible – Lapland, Iceland, Canada, northern Scotland, Spitzbergen – and interviews people for whom the lights are a big part of their lives. She travels with Sami herdsmen in northern Norway, and learns of Sami mythology and of the gradual dwindling of their nomadic way of life. In Canada she meets astronomers who run a nationwide auroral monitoring network; in Scotland, RAF pilots who regard the lights as a navigational complication.In between these human interest stories Dr Windridge does a good job of explaining the natural science of the Northern Lights. We now understand that the driving force is winds of charged particles from the Sun, with spectacular displays corresponding to solar flares and coronal mass ejections. But the fine detail is surprisingly complicated and sometimes counter-intuitive. If aurorae are created by particles from the Sun, how come they happen at night, on the far side of the Earth? The answer lies in a subtle series of magnetic field line reconnections, channelling energy from the solar wind into the Earth’s upper atmosphere. It was refreshing to read, at times, that there are aspects of this theory that we still don’t understand.Further diversions take us into the dangers that “space weather” poses for satellites in orbit, and for the power grid down on the Earth’s surface. Melanie mixes these diversions, fascinating and often quite technical, with descriptions of her own efforts to view the aurora. She describes the many aurorae she sees and even has a photo of her best attempts to capture an image of them (with another diversion on how difficult it is to photograph the aurorae and capture the rapidly-changing structure). It’s a pity that she never gets to experience a really jaw-dropping display. However, the book does finish with an astronomical treat. After a week’s skiing in the icy wilderness of Spitzbergen, she ends up in Longyearbyen, Svalbard, just in time to see the majestic total eclipse of the Sun in March 2015. (Disclosure – I was also in Longyearbyen for the very same eclipse, although I never bumped into Melanie)If you are after a coffee-table book full of pretty pictures of the Northern Lights, this isn’t quite the book for you, even though there are colour plates to accompany the text. But if you want a powerful insight into just what causes these extraordinary phenomena, and how they thread through the lives of those who live in the far north, this book comes highly recommended.
M**E
Fantastic
I read some of the reviews of the book first, and am glad I didn't listen. I thought the book was very informative from a scientific perspective, and found out what I wanted to know about how and why auroras exist. The book also includes inspiring philosophical notions and cultural references about how civilizations have understood auroras throughout the ages.
D**7
Ok
Lots of information about northern lights but needs more pictures
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