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    International Affairs

    High Lights – The New York Times

    adminBy adminApril 25, 2026No Comments6 Mins Read
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    High Lights – The New York Times
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    I saw the northern lights by accident one late summer night, driving with a friend on an unpopulated stretch of highway that sliced through North Dakota cornfields. Against a canvas of total darkness, something like an acid cityscape sprang up around our car, electric green towers and skyscrapers, spanning the space between the road and heaven. It was one of the most exciting things I’d ever experienced. We stopped the car and ran out into the fields, trying to get closer to the light, trying to somehow touch these pulsating columns of color that arrived from nowhere and now formed a simultaneously real and impossible landscape.

    The northern lights were on my mind this week after I read a story in New Scientist about Karl Lemstrom, a Finnish scientist who, in the late 19th century, tried to create a replica of the aurora borealis with a complex copper-wire apparatus meant to channel electricity in the atmosphere. He had the mechanism wrong — the aurora is caused by an interaction between charged particles from the solar wind and Earth’s magnetic field — but he was able to produce some luminosity from his wire construction, likely something akin to St. Elmo’s fire. He believed, until his death, that his experiments had yielded auroras.

    Scientists have come a long way since Lemstrom’s time, but they’re still trying to wrap their heads around auroras. The Times reported on a new 10,000-antenna radar system in Norway that aims to help us understand their finer points — like what accounts for the variations in density, and why they move. Each time I read about electromagnetism, I manage to absorb just enough to be sufficiently awed by it. I collect electromagnetic facts, keepsakes that I polish and wonder about: Birds can sense Earth’s magnetic field, which helps them with navigation. Sharks use electroreception to detect the tiny movements of prey. Our own bodies are pulsing with electrical signals.

    Knowing that the spectacle of the northern lights occurs because of electromagnetism doesn’t help to explain the feeling I had that night in the cornfield, the deep gratitude I felt for days afterward. I kept thinking about how we’d gone from total darkness to pyrotechnics in an instant. I had this feeling that there was magic in the world around me, that beauty could emerge from nothingness and I didn’t have to do anything to summon it. I just had to be there in a rented pickup truck, driving from Chicago to Calgary on an ordinary September night.

    Reading about Lemstrom’s experiments, I wanted to romanticize him, to make him into a dreamer. He was a scientist, but in my imagination he was also a poet, a man who approached an inconceivably large phenomenon and tried to wrangle it into a form he could experience on his own terms.

    I think most people are like me in that they don’t often contemplate the elemental forces that act on us every second of our lives. We don’t consider electromagnetism; we don’t sit and marvel at the very fact of gravity. We take these things for granted because we have no reason not to, and because they’re so complicated that we fear that our limited brains, the brains that are still trying to work out what to have for lunch, will be totally hopeless to understand.

    But we don’t have to. These forces are going to do what they do whether we consider them or not. And how cool is that? Gravity is going to continue to keep you grounded to the earth. The northern lights are going to continue to erect their phantom architecture from the Great Plains to the Blue Lagoon. And we don’t have to do anything at all to make it happen. We don’t have to understand it in order to experience it. How lucky are we?

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