Was mysterious jellyfish in sky caused by space satellite reflecting Northern Lights?. A strange jellyfish-shaped object spotted hanging in the sky over Norway, may have been caused by light from the aurora being bounced off a space satellite, experts say.
If proven it will be the first known case of a satellite reflecting the Northern Lights.
The mysterious phenomenon was photographed last week by amateur photographer Per-Arne Milkalsen over Andenesm, Norway.
Mr Mikalsen captured this strange phenomenon he described as a 'parachute' when taking pictures of the vivid Aurora over Andenes, Norway
The photographer became fascinated with aurorae after working at a rocket launch site in the far north of Norway for 25 years. The northern lights are often visible here because it is so close to the North Pole.
Aurorae are caused by the interaction of the solar wind with Earth's magnetic field and so are particularly prevalent at the poles where the magnetic forces are strongest.
Mr Mikalsen told the Mail Online: 'I have never seen an object like this before, and I am eager to find an explanation to the phenomenon.'
Mr Mikalsen said he was keen to find out what caused the phenomenon in the top right of his picture
The photographer first assumed the odd optical effect was a spot on his camera lens. But after he posted his photographs on Spaceweather.com he was inundated with emails from interested experts from around the world.
Lead scientist Truls Lynn Hansen from Tromsø Geophysical Observatory said he doubted the picture, taken on January 20, was due to a simple camera fault.
He told the Mail Online: 'The "phenomenon" has the same greenish colour as the Northern Lights. That means the Northern Lights is the source of light causing the strange phenomenon.'
However, Mr Hansen said it was unlikely the Northern Lights could create the optical effect on its own. Instead the aurora might be bouncing off an external source like a satellite or an airplane.
In this way it would act like an 'iridium flare.' The flares are created by sunlight reflecting off iridium satellites. They appear as bright white flashes in the sky.
One problem with Mr Hansen's theory is that the light intensity from the Northern Lights is 100,000 times weaker than the sunlight. But Mr Hansen said this did not exclude the satellite reflection hypothesis.
'The intensity of an intense aurora is not far from the intensity of moonlight,' he said.
'And the (jellyfish) phenomenon is also quite weak. Apparently many orders of magnitude down compared to the solar iridium flares.'
Pal Brekke, senior adviser, at the Norwegian Space Centre, told the Mail Online: 'A reflection from streetlight would be the most straightforward explanation.
'But why is it green? One should think it would be white or yellow if it was a reflection from the streetlight.
'So while I am not yet fully convinced it was a satellite - one cannot rule this out.'
Iridium satellites have three main antennas. When at a certain angle the Sun's reflection from one such antenna produces a small spot on the surface of the Earth around 6.25miles in diameter. This moves as the satellite and the Earth move. Someone within this area on Earth can observe iridium flares or flashes in the sky
The Aurora Borealis or 'Northern Lights' as seen by the International Space Station. Some experts believe the aurora can be reflected off satellites like an iridium flare
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