• Northern Lights over New Jersey (11-November-2025)

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    Northern Light Display over New Jersey (11-November-2025)
    Northern Light Display over New Jersey (11-November-2025). Images taken with a Nikon Z9 camera and 8-15 mm fisheye lens.

    I received NOAA Space Weather alerts that there was a high potential for strong geomagnetic G3/G4 activity for the next few days. Several strong solar flares had ejected charged particles directed toward the earth. It is unusual to see Northern Lights (Aurora) in New Jersey. The last time there was a strong display that I could see from my backyard was on 11-October-2024. I hoped for a chance to view and photograph the northern lights from my backyard again. I checked both the Clear Sky report for the Sourland Mountains, and the National Weather Service local forecast which indicated mixed clouds with some clear skies for the night. I set up cameras with wide angle lenses and a 360° camera to record images over the night. It was cold and windy, so I wasn’t going to stay out all night by myself. Rather let the cameras do their work then download and view the images the next morning. The cameras were set up with external batteries and lens warmers (to prevent condensation on the wide-angle lenses). It seemed like every time I went out to check the cameras there were fast moving clouds and I wasn’t sure if I would get anything other than images of nighttime clouds.

    The next morning when I started to download the images, I did see some red and then green colors in some of the images. The following time-lapse videos show the Northern Light display looking straight up and north over my house. During the night there were several displays of both red and green lights starting a little after 20:00. The high winds kept the clouds moving across the sky. The brightest display occurred a bit after midnight. After that the clouds blocked further displays.


    Time-lapse video created from images taken with a Hasselblad X2d camera and 20-35 mm lens (ISO 800, 20 mm, f/11, 32 sec exposures). The images were processed with Capture One, and the time-lapse video created with Photoshop. The camera is pointed north looking over my house.

    Little Planet Starlapse video taken with an Insta 360 RS camera. The video including the starlapse effect was created using the Insta 360 studio software.

    Time-lapse video created from images taken with a Nikon Z9 camera and 8-15 mm fisheye lens (ISO 800, 15 mm, f/11, 30 sec exposures). The images were processed with Capture One, and the time-lapse video created with Photoshop. The camera is pointed north looking over my house from the backyard.

    Time-lapse video created from images taken with a Hasselblad 907x camera and Laowa 8-15 mm fisheye lens (ISO 400, 11.5 mm, f/11, 32 sec exposures). The camera is pointed straight up capturing a 180° view of the sky. The images were processed with Capture One, and the time-lapse video created with Photoshop. The house blocks part of the view to the north (left side of the image).

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