The northern light: from mythology to space research [Libro electrónico] / autores: Asgeir Brekke, Alv Egeland
Por: Brekke, Asgeir [autor/a].
Egeland, Alv [editor/a].
Tipo de material: Libro en línea Editor: New York, New York, United States: Springer-Verlag, c1983Descripción: xi, 170 páginas : ilustraciones ; 31 centímetros.ISBN: 0387124292; 9783642691089 (Print); 9783642691065 (Online).Tema(s): Auroras -- ScandinaviaNota de acceso: Disponible para usuarios de ECOSUR con su clave de acceso Nota de bibliografía: Incluye bibliografía e índice: páginas 161-163 Número de sistema: 56068Contenidos:Mostrar Resumen:Tipo de ítem | Biblioteca actual | Colección | Signatura | Estado | Fecha de vencimiento | Código de barras |
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Libros | Biblioteca Electrónica Recursos en línea (RE) | Acervo General | Recurso digital | ECO400560689547 |
Incluye bibliografía e índice: páginas 161-163
1. The northern light in folklore and mythology.. 2. The northern light in Norse literature.. 3. The northern light - a source of inspiration.. 4. Accounts of northern lights in Scandinavia - from the Viking era to the renaissance.. 5. The northern light in Scandinavia during the eighteenth century.. 6. Scientific auroral experiments beginning in the nineteenth century.. 7. Norwegian auroral pioneers in the dawn of our century.. 8. The northern lights as weather signs - and the auroral sound.. 9. Northern lights and geomagnetic disturbances - their influence on daily life.. 10. Auroral research as a tool to study the upper atmosphere and near space.. 11. The first systematic observations of the northern light in Norway - auroral observatories and instrumentation.. 12. Summary and concluding remarks.. Subject Index
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In Nordic literature a remarkable discussion of the northern light appears in Kongespeilet (The King's Mirror) a thirteenth-century Norwegian chronicle. It is described in vivid detail as the following translated excerpts demonstrate: These northern lights have this peculiar nature, that the darker the night is, the brighter they seem, and they always appear at night but never by day, most frequently in the densest darkness and rarely by moonlight. In appearance they resemble a vast flame of fire viewed from a great distance. It also looks as if sharp points were shot from this flame up into the sky; these are of uneven height and in constant motion, now one, now another darting highest; and the light appears to blaze like a living flame. Three different theories for the origin of the northern light were suggested in this book. Numerous naturally occurring heavenly phenomena have been observed and enjoyed as long as the Earth has been inhabited, but hardly any of them has stirred man's imagination, curiosity and fear as much as the northern light. The northern light is certainly one of the most spectacular of nature's phenomena. eng
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