Northern Lights dazzle over West of England

The Northern Lights in a starry sky above a black silhouette of treesImage source, BBC Weather Watchers / Aurora Watcher
Image caption,

The Cotswold village of Chalford was one of the places the spectacle could be seen

  • Published

The Northern Lights lit up the skies across parts of the West of England on Wednesday night.

BBC Weather Watchers shared photos of the enchanting sight, known as aurora borealis, in Somerset, Gloucestershire and Wiltshire between 21:00 and 23:00 BST.

It could be seen after a "severe geomagnetic storm", reaching level four out of five on the geomagnetic storm scale, according to AuroraWatch UK.

BBC Weather reported the aurora was enhanced due to the strength of the storm, and could be seen across southern England.

A sky full of stars with a faint Northern Lights display with slight purple coloursImage source, BBC Weather Watchers / Dotty
Image caption,

The storm was seen across southern England, like here in Liddington, Wiltshire.

The Northern Lights in a starry sky and underneath some houses.Image source, BBC Weather Watchers / Tedder
Image caption,

Salisbury, in Wiltshire, also had a strong display of the lights

It comes after a vibrant display was seen across Scotland on Tuesday, meaning for two nights in a row the spectacle shone across the UK.

BBC Weather added more sightings in the coming weeks and months are possible as solar activity remains high.

The Northern Lights in a starry sky taken from a garden and a large tree is in frame.Image source, BBC Weather Watchers / James
Image caption,

Weather Watchers were also treated to the display in Chard, Somerset

There have been frequent sightings of the aurora in the UK over the last year.

The sun is currently at a "maximum" in its 11-year solar cycle.

This means there are lots of sunspots on the surface which are like volcanoes and occasionally erupt. They are also known as Coronal Mass Ejections (CME's) and release extra material and energy out to space.

A faint Northern Lights display lighting up a starry sky with faint purpleImage source, BBC Weather Watchers / Claire
Image caption,

The aurora was seen in Chard, Somerset, at about 22:00 on Wednesday night.

If directed towards Earth, our magnetic field pulls the energy into Earth, entering our atmosphere at the poles.

Fast solar winds are likely on 20 April, according to the Met Office Space Weather forecast, meaning "active" intervals are possible.

The Northern Lights hanging over the Bristol Channel in MineheadImage source, Lorraine Barker
Image caption,

A stargazer captured the aurora on Minehead seafront in Somerset

Get in touch

Tell us which stories we should cover in Wiltshire

Follow BBC Wiltshire on Facebook, external, X, external and Instagram, external. Send your story ideas to us on email or via WhatsApp on 0800 313 4630.