The Great Auroras of 2024


The Sun peaked at โ€œsolar maximumโ€ and gave us wonderful sky shows in 2024. 

Officially, the Sun reached the peak of its roughly 11-year cycle of activity โ€” “solar max” โ€” in late 2024. Thatโ€™s according to NASA and NOAA.

During 2024 several major solar storms erupted as a result of the Sunโ€™s increased activity. They blew massive clouds of energetic particles โ€” electrons and protons โ€” away from the Sun. Some of those storm clouds swept past Earth, sparking bright auroras widely seen in both the Northern and Southern Hemispheres. 

The rise and fall of solar activity. The peak at right is as of November 2024 in mid-Cycle 25. Courtesy SolarCycleScience.com.

I was fortunate enough, as many were, to witness several of 2024โ€™s great auroras, from home in Alberta, and from as far south as Arizona. 

Trips north to Churchill, Manitoba, and to northern Norway also presented some fine aurora nights. But thatโ€™s normal at any time in the solar cycle from those sub-Arctic and Arctic locations.

Itโ€™s when the aurora comes to you that you get a truly memorable show. And 2024 had its share of them.


This was the month I made my annual trek to Churchill, Manitoba, to instruct aurora tour groups at the Churchill Northern Studies Centre. Why not join us in 2025?

An aurora selfie at the Churchill Northern Studies Centre, on February 10, with a modest Kp4-level storm underway. This is 20-seconds with the TTArtisan 11mm fisheye lens at f/2.8 on the Canon R6 at ISO 1600.

Yes, the air is cold (usually about -25ยฐ C) but the skies are often clear and aurora filled, as Churchill sits under the normal location of the auroral oval, the main zone of auroras. In fact, it is as far south in the world as the auroral oval normally resides, at a latitude of only 58ยบ North, well south of the Arctic. If itโ€™s clear, thereโ€™s almost always some level of Northern Lights. 

This year, 2024, was no exception. Even on nights with low readings on the usual auroral indicators we got sky-filling displays that are rare down south. 

This is a southerly arc of green and red Northern Lights on February 9. This is a panorama of 5 segments, each 20 seconds with the Laowa 15mm lens at f/2 on the Canon R6 at ISO 1600.

What I find in Churchill is that even with numerically weak and visually dim shows, as above, the camera often sees very red and photogenic auroras. The eye sees the colours only when the aurora brightens, which it often does (as I record below), sparking rippling green curtains (from glowing oxygen) fringed with pink (from glowing nitrogen).

I didnโ€™t shoot time-lapses or movies this year in Churchill. Instead, the example movie above, shot using just real-time (not time-lapse) videos, is from February 2019. It is from my AmazingSky YouTube channel.

The video presents the aurora much as the eye saw it, and as it appears when it dances.

This is a 360ยบ panorama of the all-sky aurora of February 10, from the Churchill Northern Studies Centre. This is a panorama of 9 segments, each 15 seconds with the TTArtisan 11mm lens at f/2.8 on the Canon R6 at ISO 1600.

However, I tend now to shoot mostly panoramas, as above, from this year’s visit. They can take in the full show across the sky, in high-resolution images suitable for framing! 


The aurora apps were beeping this day, warning a great display was in the offing. The composite satellite image below from NOAA shows the actual extent of the aurora around the Northern Hemisphere during the great display of May 10/11 . 

Note how the auroral oval is indeed an oval and how the centre is not the geographic North Pole. It is the North Geomagnetic Pole, in the High Arctic of Canada. ๐Ÿ‡จ๐Ÿ‡ฆ So the oval dips down farther south over North America than it does over Europe.

Image courtesy of the U.S. National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration.

The May 10 solar storm rated a top “G5” on the G1 to G5 storm scale, while the โ€œKpโ€geomagnetic disturbance index reached Kp8 on the Kp0 (nothing) to Kp9 (OMG!) scale. 

I gave a talk at a local community art gallery that evening, and alerted the audience to the likelihood of fine aurora later that night. Sure enough, I got home in time to see the sky already lighting up with aurora in the twilight and behind the clouds. 

This was the multi-coloured curtain to the south during the great display of May 10. This is a 10-second exposure with the Laowa 15mm lens at f/2.8 on the Canon Ra at ISO 1600.

The clouds cleared off enough to reveal one of the most colourful shows Iโ€™d seen in many years. This time there was no question about seeing reds and vivid pinks with the unaided eye. This was the type of show everyone hopes for. But it takes a Kp6 show and higher to spark it.

This was the view as the aurora suddenly brightened and converged at the zenith for a superb corona effect. This lasted no more than a minute before it dimmed and subsided again. This is a 9-second exposure with the Laowa 7.5mm circular fisheye lens at f/2 on the Canon R5 at ISO 800.

I blogged previously about the Great May Aurora Display here

And a music video of the May 10 display incorporating time-lapse and real-time video footage is on my YouTube channel, with the clickable link below. Do enlarge to full screen.

One of the most remarkable aspects of this show was the blue auroras later in the night (shown below), created by sunlight illuminating the upper curtains and reacting with atmospheric nitrogen. The usual auroral greens and reds are from oxygen. Pinks are also from nitrogen. Blues are less common, but were in abundance this night.

This is a 360ยฐย panorama of the May 10/11 aurora exhibiting vertical blue and magenta rays across the western (left), northern (bottom), and eastern (right) sky, and an odd bright patch to the south at top. This was toward the end of the main activity this night, at about 2:30 am. This is made of 20 segments, each 13-second exposures, with the Laowa 15mm lens at f/2 on the Canon Ra at ISO 800.

Auroras around summer solstice, June 21, can be more colourful and often blue, as the Sun lights the upper atmosphere all night. I saw blue auroras again later in the summer.


June and July are normally when we in western Canada get good displays of another northern mid-latitude phenomenon, noctilucent clouds (NLCs)

This shows sunlit noctilucent clouds in the northwest in the summer twilight, and as the waxing crescent Moon sets at left. This was July 9 at 11:45 pm MDT, in a panorama of 5 segments, each a 30-second exposure with the Canon RF24-105mm lens at f/4 and 58mm on the Canon R5 at ISO 400.

These are ice clouds at 80 km altitude (almost in space) that are lit by sunlight all night long. I saw only a couple of displays of NLCs this year, and it wasnโ€™t for lack of trying and clear nights, even amid forest fire smoke. The panorama above is from home on July 9, over a yellow canola field. NLC season always coincides with peak canola colour time!

Might NLCs be suppressed by high solar activity? Thereโ€™s some data that suggests they are. However, we werenโ€™t getting many auroras either in early summer. 

A 180ยฐ panorama of the surprise aurora of July 25, as there was little indication in the days before that an aurora was possible this night. This is a panorama of 6 segments, with the Viltrox 16mm lens at f/2 on the Nikon Z6III at ISO 800, each 8-second exposures.

But at the end of July the Northern Lights returned for some classic shows of arcs across my northern sky, first on July 25 (above), with a prominent sunlit blue/purple ray at left by the Big Dipper. The Kp Index reached Kp5 this night, which is enough to produce a good display from my location in southern Alberta. The Moon is rising at right.

A 180ยฐ panorama of the Kp5-level aurora on July 29, with a green arc, and magenta and red rays. This is a panorama of 8 segments, each 30-second exposures with the Viltrox 16mm at f/2 on the Nikon Z6III at ISO 800.

Then again, four nights later on July 29, an auroral arc appeared across the north, this one with reds mixing with greens to create a yellow band in the east, as well as blue and magenta tops to the green arc that follows the curve of the auroral oval. 


While June and July were quiet months, August made up for them.

Of all the auroras this year, only this one, on August 1, produced a showing of STEVE, at least as best I saw in 2024. He can be elusive and easily missed!

This is a capture of a faint appearance of a STEVE-like arc during the Kp5 aurora of July31/Aug 1. This was at 12:10 a.m. MDT, so on Aug 1. The camera recorded the pinkish rays at right which are likely STEVE arcs below a more diffuse and fainter red band which may be a SAR, a Stable Auroral Red arc.

STEVE is the odd arc, often white or mauve, that appears southward of the main aurora (from here in the Northern Hemisphere), typically after a show has peaked, then subsided and retreated back north, as it did above. 

STEVE stands for Strong Thermal Emission Velocity Enhancement, as it is caused by horizontally flowing hot gas, and so is not, by definition, a true aurora created by energetic particles raining vertically down magnetic field lines. 

For a classic showing of STEVE see my video, above, from August 2022. High-resolution 4K video I shot this night formed the basis for a scientific research paper, as it revealed structures in STEVE no one had seen before.

This is a capture of a brief appearance of a STEVE arc in the west during the Kp5 aurora of July31/Aug 1. This was at 1:10 a.m. MDT, so on Aug 1. The mauve STEVE arc was visible for about 15 minutes before it gradually faded. The green picket fence fingers, which were visible to the eye but colourless, appeared only a minute or so before this image and were gone no more than 2 mnutes later.

STEVEs are often accompanied by green โ€œpicket fence fingersโ€ hanging down from the mauve arc. These fingers are more akin to normal auroras, but are created by particles from the STEVE band raining down local magnetic field lines. They do not come from far out in space as they do in a normal aurora!


On the night of August 3/4 I was able to join a photo tour run by local photographer Neil Zeller, to shoot Milky Way nightscapes. Escaping clouds, we ended up at a scenic spot south of Medicine Hat, Alberta, called Red Rock Coulee. 

A 180ยฐ panorama of a Kp5-level aurora on a partly cloudy night, August 3/4. This was looking to the northeast at 3:00 am from a side road off the Trans-Canada Highway in southern Alberta just east of Brooks.

On the way home, the aurora began to let loose behind the clouds. We stopped once off the highway as the aurora brightened in an arc across the northeast, above.

A bright auroral curtain sweeps from the zenith down the western sky, as the sky brightens with the blue of a dawn twilight. This was the morning of August 4, with a Kp5 to 6 level aurora underway. The location was just off Highway 1 between Brooks and Bassano, Alberta. This is a single 13-second exposure with the Viltrox 16mm lens at f/2 on the Nikon Z6III at ISO 400.

We stopped again later, now at 4 am, and marvelled as the curtains converged at the zenith in the finest manifestation an aurora can produce, a swirling zenith โ€œcorona.โ€

A music video from August 4, using just a single real-time video, not a time-lapse, is above. It shows almost the full but brief appearance of the corona, just as the eye saw it looking straight up!


August was a good month! Right after the annual Saskatchewan Summer Star Party in the Cypress Hills I headed farther east to Grasslands National Park, a favourite dark-sky site I had not visited since 2019. 

My plan was to shoot the annual Perseid meteor shower that was to peak on Sunday, August 11, from the same spot I shot it in 2016.

A 270ยฐ panorama of the aurora in the evening twilight on August 11, from the 70 Mile Butte trailhead in Grasslands National Park, West Block near Val Marie, Saskatchewan. This is a panorama of 11 segments, each 15 seconds with the Laowa 15mm lens at f/2.8 on the Canon R5 at ISO 800.

The aurora had other plans. Again, as it did on May 10, the sky was lighting up with colours as it darkened in the evening twilight, above.

This is a 360ยฐ all-sky panorama of the Kp6 to 7-level aurora on August 11, from Grasslands National Park. This is a panorama of 12 segments, each 4 seconds with the Laowa 15mm lens at f/2 on the Canon R5 at ISO 4000.

The aurora expanded to fill the sky, and with odd fragmented bits, shown above. My trio of cameras set up for the meteor shower got repurposed into taking aurora time-lapses, stills, and panoramas. And selfies! โ€” the title slide for this blog was from this memorable night at Grasslands. 

The aurora was bright enough during this substorm outburst at 12:15 am that the red and green colours could be seen with the eye, though they were subtle. This is a 2-second exposure with the Laowa 15mm lens at f/2 on the Canon R5 at ISO 3200.

A notable moment was at midnight when, even to the eye, the sky to the east suddenly turned red, and a wave of crimson aurora quickly swept in. The reds from oxygen mix with the more usual auroral greens, also from oxygen, to create areas of yellow in the sky. 

This was also peak night for the 2024 Perseid meteor shower. One bright Perseid meteor shoots down the Milky Way in Cygnus at top, amid the converging rays of the aurora at the magnetic zenith. This is with the Laowa 10mm lens at f/2.8 on the Nikon Z6III at ISO 6400 for 2 seconds.

A few still frames in the time-lapses did manage to catch a Perseid meteor or two, as above, embedded in the vivid curtains of light. But the meteors were upstaged by the Northern Lights this night.

A music video of this show is above, also on my YouTube channel (itโ€™s been a busy year!). Using only time-lapses, it captures the sudden arrival of the red sub-storm, sped up to be sure, but it seemed that quick!


This night I was hoping to shoot deep-sky objects with telescopes I was testing at home. Again, the aurora had other ideas.

This view is looking north, but the fisheye lens is taking in much of the sky. The August 30 show was somewhat unexpected, though there were last-hour warnings a sky-covering display might be possible. This is a single 4-second exposure with the TTArtisan 7.5mm fisheye lens at f/2 on the Nikon Z6III at ISO 3200.

As the movie shows, a band of Lights across the north early in the evening promised to develop. So I set up a time-lapse camera and fisheye lens to capture, for once, a complete development of an aurora, from a diffuse band, to the onset of an active sub-storm outburst which occurred, as they often do, at midnight when we are looking down Earthโ€™s magnetic tail at the source of the aurora particles. 

As the video shows, the storm then subsides and the aurora changes character. During the post-sub-storm โ€œrecovery phase,โ€ usually when we are under the dawn sector of the auroral oval, an aurora can switch to a pulsating effect with patches of aurora flashing off and on and flaming up to the zenith. This form of aurora is caused by electrons trapped in the Van Allen radiation belts that are bouncing back and forth from pole to pole.

To capture this aspect of the show I switched to real-time video with that same lens, reviewed here on a previous blog

The music video of this show, above, uses a mix of time-lapses and real-time videos shot with the 360ยบ 7.5mm fisheye lens. Itโ€™s a great aurora lens for capturing it all!


Auroras are often most frequent, active, and bright around the spring and autumn equinoxes, when the magnetic field lines of Earth and interplanetary space better connect. Itโ€™s called the Russell-McPherron Effect.

This is a 360ยฐ panorama from left (southeast) to right (northeast) and extending from the horizon to the zenith, taking in the entire sky during an outburst of a particularly colourful aurora on September 16. This is a panorama of 12 segments, each 4 seconds with the Laowa 15mm lens at f/2 on the Canon R5 at ISO 400.

September 16 (6 days before the autumnal equinox) saw another all-sky show that, for us in western Canada, rivalled May 10. As with the spring show, this aurora was notable for its great range of colours, with nitrogen pinks and magentas mixed in with shades of oxygen yellow-greens and reds. 

A darker blue-green band to the south (at left above) during the peak could be aurora from incoming protons exciting hydrogen, not from the usual electrons that excite all other auroras and light up oxygen and nitrogen atoms and molecules.

Yes, there are proton auroras. Another research paper using my images from an October 2021 aurora explored the relationship between proton auroras and SAR arcs (explained below).

This is an all-sky 360ยฐ panorama from the horizon at the edges, to the zenith at centre, taking in the entire sky during an outburst of a particularly colourful aurora on September 16. This is a panorama of 12 segments, each 4 seconds with the Laowa 15mm lens at f/2 on the Canon R5 at only ISO 400.

The September 16 show started with a diffuse band which quickly exploded as a sub-storm onslaught of energetic particles arrived to light up the aurora with greater brilliance, colours, and rapid motion. The onset of a substorm can happen in literally just a minute. 

Even the nearly Full Moon failed to diminish this show, seen from home under perfect skies. Luckily, the smoky season had abated.

A music video of this nightโ€™s show is also above on YouTube. Do click through to watch this and the other videos in full screen mode.


Six months to the day after the great May 10 show, the sky erupted again with auroras seen all over the world, even from more southerly latitudes that donโ€™t normally see Northern Lights.

A rare red aurora seen from latitude +32ยบ N from southeast Arizona during the major Kp8-level storm of October 10. This is looking north from the Quailway Cottage near Portal, Arizona and Rodeo, New Mexico. This is a single 15-second exposure with the Canon RF15-35mm lens at 15mm and f/2.8 on the Canon R5 at ISO 1600.

I know because I was at one of those latitudes, in southern Arizona at 32ยฐ N. The aurora created the kind of show seen from areas that donโ€™t normally get auroras โ€” a red sky on the horizon. It is these ominous red skies that provoked Medieval fears of divine wrath and myths of armies clashing in the distant North.

Red auroras can also occur in the Southern Hemisphere (as can every other form of aurora) when the aurora australis brightens and extends farther north than normal, lighting up the southern sky red at locations that rarely see the Southern Lights.

In both cases we are seeing just the red tops of distant curtains that mostly lie hidden over the horizon, the red coming from oxygen reactions that can happen only at the rarefied altitudes of 300 to 500 km. Oxygen greens come from 100 to 300 km up.

From Arizona, I saw what many in the U.S. saw this night โ€” a prominent glow, obviously red even to the eye, across the northern horizon. I was missing a far better show at home!

This is a 360ยฐ panorama covering the entire sky and extending up to the zenith at centre, capturing a rare SAR (Stable Auroral Red) arc across the Arizona sky in the pre-dawn hours of October 11. This is a panorama of 12 segments, each 30 seconds at f/2.8 with the Canon RF15-35mm lens on the Canon R5 at ISO 3200.

But unique to my more southerly site was this phenomenon, also widely seen across the U.S. and southern Canada.

Accompanying the โ€œnormalโ€ aurora to the north was a diffuse red (to the camera) arc across the sky that lasted most of the night. This was a Stable Auroral Red (SAR) arc, created by thermal energy flowing horizontally in the high atmosphere some 400 km up.

SARs have been seen evolving into STEVEs, as the mechanisms seem related. Indeed, one of my images from August 1, shown above, seems to show a SAR/STEVE hybrid.

I set up a wide-angle lens and time-lapse hoping to catch such an evolution first-hand, which would have been of great interest to researchers. Alas, the SAR did not cooperate, stubbornly remaining a SAR all night. 

This was the pre-dawn scene from southeastern Arizona on the morning of October 11 that frames a suite of skyglows. This is a panorama of 3 segments, each a stack of 5 x 1-minute tracked exposures with the Canon RF15-35mm lens at 15mm and f/2.8 on the Canon R5 at ISO 1600.

By dawn, with blue sunlight at work, the SAR looked magenta in the twilight, accompanied by two other sky glows: 

  • The pyramid-shaped Zodiacal Light created by sunlight reflecting off cometary and meteoric dust in the inner solar system, 
  • And the winter Milky Way, created by the combined light of distant stars in our section of our Galaxy. 
  • So in one image we have atmospheric, interplanetary, and interstellar sky glows! This was truly an amazing sky, the likes of which I might never see again.

In early November I headed to Norway to instruct my first aurora group there since 2019. The location was on board a ship, the m/s Nordkapp, a ferry in the Hurtigruten fleet that does 12-day runs along the coast, from Bergen in the south, to Kirkenes in the far north, and back again. 

Passengers on board the m/s Nordkapp are watching the Northern Light show on November 9, from the coast of Norway. This is 0.4 seconds at f/1.8 with the Nikkor 20mm lens on the Nikon Z6III at ISO 3200.

We got three nights in a row of active auroras on the northbound voyage. A Kp4 to 5 storm brought the Lights farther south and overhead for us early in the voyage, something we donโ€™t normally see in Norway until we get underneath the auroral oval, which at that longitude in the world lies above the Arctic Circle, north of 66ยฐ latitude. 

A colourful aurora appears in the darkening evening twilight sky at sea along the coast of Norway on November 9. This is a single 2-second exposure with the 20mm Nikkor lens at f/1.8 on the Nikon Z6III at ISO 1600.

But on November 9, with a storm underway, the show started early, rudely interrupting our groupโ€™s cocktail hour as we all rushed up on deck. As it can do, the aurora glowing in a twilight sky took on added tints. 

This is a panorama of auroral arcs across the southern sky, with prominent red content contrasting with the oxygen yellow-green bands. Taken on November 10/11 (just after midnight). This is a panorama of 7 segments, each 1.3-second exposures with the Nikkor 20mm lens at f/1.8 on the Nikon Z6III at ISO 3200.

The next night, November 10, as we sailed through the mountainous Lofoten Islands, we were treated to an aurora with lots of red content, above. No two auroras are alike!

An arc of Northern Lights points the way into the narrow Trollfjord in the Lofoten Islands of Norway, as our ship, the m/s Nordkapp enters the fjord at night by searchlight. This is a 0.5-second exposure at f/1.8 with the Nikkor 20mm lens on the Nikon Z6III at ISO 1600.

A curtain of aurora also nicely pointed the way into the short but scenic Trollfjord, a fjord the ship captains like to navigate into for a memorable side trip as we slide through the narrow canyon with seemingly inches to spare. 

A gallery of my Norway auroras is here on my website.

All going well, I will be back in Norway for two cruises in October. Join me!

A music video of real-time aurora sequences shot from on deck during my November 2024 Norway cruise is above on YouTube. Note the phones held high, the way most people now shoot the aurora, and usually with very good success!


We have more to look forward to in 2025.

First, it is likely that the Sun has not peaked, but may undergo a second peak of maximum activity in 2025 or 2026. A double peak is common at many solar maxes. Just look at the graph at the opening of the blog, and the previous peaks of Cycles 23 and 24.

Plus, the most energetic solar flares and storms often occur after the peak on the downward trend of activity. So we could well see more worldwide aurora displays like we had on May 10 and October 10 in the coming two to three years. The show is far from over!

Watch websites like SpaceWeather.com for aurora alerts and news of solar events coming our way. 

โ€” Alan, December 15, 2024 / AmazingSky.com   

The Great Comet Chase of 2024


A plan to shoot the promised bright comet of 2024 paid off, with fine views at dawn and at dusk of the best comet since 2020. 

Comets are always a gamble. Any new comets discovered, the ones that usually become the brightest, have no track record of performance. Predictions of how bright a new comet might appear are based on what a typical comet should do. But comets can outperform expectations and dazzle us, or they can fizzle and fade away. 

In late 2023 it was clear that a then newly-discovered comet, C/2023 A3, named Tsuchinshan-ATLAS after the observatories where it was co-discovered, had the potential to perform in late 2024.ย 

The low angle and position of the comet from home in Canada in the late September dawn sky, simulated in StarryNight software.

Knowing where it would be in the sky (that trait of a comet can be predicted with accuracy!) I planned a field trip to the U.S. desert Southwest for late September and early October 2024. From farther south the comet would be higher than it would be from home (shown above), and over spectacular landscapes. 

I had visions of another Comet NEOWISE from July 2020. As my blog from 2020 shows, we saw that photogenic comet well from our northern latitude in Canada, as it skimmed across the northern horizon. Tsuchinshan-ATLAS would require a chase south.ย 


September 26 & 27 โ€” at Bryce Canyon, Utah

In late September 2024 the comet would be inbound, approaching the Sun and in the morning sky. What better eastern scene than overlooking Bryce Canyon in Utah, where I had been a year before, for the October 14, 2023 annular eclipse of the Sun in the morning sky. (Click the link for my eclipse chase blog.)

I was fortunate to get two clear mornings, both from the Fairyland Canyon viewpoint, just a short walk from the parking lot to carry camera gear and tracking mounts. 

Comet C/2023 A3, Tsuchinshan-ATLAS, at dawn over Bryce Canyon, on the morning of September 27, 2024.

My first look at the comet on September 27 was on the day the comet was at perihelion, closest to the Sun in its orbit, though not in the sky at our viewing angle from Earth. 

The comet was just visible to the unaided eye, but was obvious on the camera view screen, even amid the bright twilight. I had to shoot fast as the window between โ€œcomet riseโ€ and the sky brightening too much was only a few minutes long. 

Comet C/2023 A3, Tsuchinshan-ATLAS, rising in the twilight over Bryce Canyon, on September 28, 2024.

Knowing better what to look for, I caught the comet a little sooner the next morning on September 28, and so the tail appeared longer and more impressive as it rose above the distant mountains. A group of other local photographers arrived just a few minutes too late both mornings, and so struggled to just sight the comet, let alone photograph it. 

This vertical panorama takes in the nebula-rich northern winter Milky Way over the formations of Bryce Canyon National Park, from the Fairyland Canyon viewpoint.

But I had arrived extra early, to shoot a vertical panorama (above) of the winter Milky Way over the canyon formations below. This and the comet images were shot with the aid of a sky tracker to follow the stars, but with the tracker off for separate shots of the ground. 

So I had bagged the comet at Bryce! On to the next stop.


September 28 & 29 โ€” at Monument Valley, Utah

Thereโ€™s no more iconic or famous landscape in the American West than the buttes of Monument Valley, on the Navaho Tribal Lands on the Arizona/Utah border. 

This panorama from the Navaho Tribal Park at Monument Valley shows the evening twilight sky looking east opposite the sunset to the rising dark blue arc of Earth’s shadow cast on the atmosphere. The shadow is rimmed with a pink “Belt of Venus” tint from sunlight still hitting the upper atmosphere.

A clear first evening provided a fabulous view of the arc of Earthโ€™s shadow across the eastern sky from the viewpoint near the aptly named The View Hotel. 

This is a panorama of the sunrise scene at the Navaho Tribal Park, Monument Valley, Arizona, taken just after sunrise with the low Sun lighting the iconic buttes and mesas of the Valley. The West and East Mittens are at left; the Sun was behind Merrick Butte at centre, and lighting Mitchell Mesa at right.

A wonderful sunrise on my second morning there made for a spectacular panorama. But while clouds created fine sunrise lighting, they arenโ€™t conducive to seeing comets!

Comet C/2023 A3, Tsuchinshan-ATLAS (at centre), is rising in the dawn twilight over Monument Valley, Arizona on the morning of September 30, 2024. The comet is rising just south (right) of Merrick Butte.

A band of clear sky near the horizon allowed me to catch the comet rising to the right of Merrick Butte, as seen from a spot south of The View from where I had calculated the comet would rise in the right position. From the usual Valley viewpoint farther north the comet would have been behind the butte. 

While the planning worked, the result was not quite the spectacle I had envisioned. The comet was nice, but was starting to become lost in the bright sky as it descended toward the Sun. 

There were only a couple of mornings left to catch the comet at dawn before it disappeared completely into the daytime sky close to the Sun. 


October 1 to 11 โ€” at Quailway Cottage, Arizona

The major block of time in my trip was booked for an astrophoto retreat at a cottage Iโ€™d rented twice before but not since late 2017. The Quailway Cottage, popular among birders, is also ideal for stargazing as it is in one of the darkest areas of the Southwest, north of Douglas, Arizona, and just across the Arizona/New Mexico border. 

This captures both the glow of Zodiacal Light in the eastern dawn sky (the band of light extending up across the frame) and the dust tail of Comet Tsuchinshan-ATLAS rising from behind the Pelloncillo mountains, at dawn on October 2, 2024.

When I arrived the comet was putting in its last show in the dawn sky. In fact, on October 2 I managed to capture a dawn scene with the morning Zodiacal Light created by sunlight reflecting off cometary dust in the inner solar system, and just the tail of the comet rising before the bright comet head appeared.

Comet C/2023 A3, Tsuchinshan-ATLAS, is rising in the dawn twilight over the Pelloncillo Mountains in New Mexico, on October 2, 2024.

An image taken a little later showed the entire comet, now sporting a more impressive tail. It was blossoming into a fine comet indeed. But we were about to lose sight of it for more than a week. 

Arizona Deep-Sky Imaging 

While at Quailway I had clear skies every night. And so, as planned, I went to town shooting all kinds of โ€œdeep-skyโ€ objects and fields with two astrophoto rigs I had brought with me: a longer-focal length 120mm refractor for small targets, and a short-focal length refractor for wide fields in the Milky Way. I had reviewed both new telescopes in recent months. 

I concentrated on shooting targets low in the south that are impossible to get from home in Canada, and that Iโ€™ve missed shooting, or have not shot well, during my visits to Australia.ย See my blog here about my latest trek Down Under.

The two brightest Fornax cluster members are the elliptical galaxy NGC 1399 at upper left, paired with smaller NGC 1404, and the galaxy NGC 1365 at lower right, considered one of the best barred spirals in the sky.

Hereโ€™s an example, above, with the larger Askar 120APO: a field of galaxies in the constellation of Fornax that rivals the better-known Markarianโ€™s Chain of galaxies in Coma Berenices in the northern spring sky.

This frames the spectacular region of the Milky Way near the direction of the galactic centre in Sagittarius.

And hereโ€™s a field (above) with the small Founder Optics Draco 62mm scope, framing the rich Sagittarius Starcloud punctuated with the small dark Ink Spot Nebula, all below the bright Lagoon and Trifid Nebulas. 

This panorama extends for about 240ยบ along the northern half of the Milky Way, from Orion at left, to Sagittarius at right, and centered on the Galactic Equator.

In autumn the Milky Way is up all night. So I used a simple star tracker, the MSM Nomad reviewed here on my blog, and a 28-70mm lens at 35mm to shoot a panorama from dusk to dawn along the Milky Way โ€” from the summer stars of Sagittarius and Cygnus (at right, above), through the autumn constellations overhead in Cassiopeia and Perseus (at centre), and down into the pre-dawn sky with the winter stars in and around Orion (at left). 

A Bonus Aurora from Arizona 

I was just north of the Mexican border, at a latitude 32ยฐ North, more than 20ยฐ farther south than at home in Alberta. But what should appear in my sky but โ€ฆ aurora! 

A selfie of me observing the great red aurora of October 10, 2024, from southern Arizona.

On October 9, and then again more so on October 10, a great solar storm brought Northern Lights down to me. And indeed across all of Canada and the U.S. The result for me was a red glow to the north โ€” the tops of distant auroral curtains I would have seen filling my sky at home. 

A time-lapse of an Arizona aurora, using a 15mm wide-angle lens shooting nearly 400 forty-second exposures. View it in-line here. Enlarge to a full screen view. There is no sound.

Above is a time-lapse video of the aurora that night, from a camera aimed due north for four hours. The red curtains come and go through the night.

This is a 360ยฐ panorama covering the entire sky and extending up to the zenith at centre, capturing a rare SAR arc across the Arizona sky in the pre-dawn hours of October 11, 2024.

The remarkable feature that night, October 10/11, was not the aurora, but what is called a SAR (Stable Auroral Red) arc that persisted all night. It appeared as a diffuse red band across the sky, created by heat energy leaking into the upper atmosphere during the solar storm. SAR arcs can accompany an aurora but are not auroras themselves. 

This panorama takes in a rare confluence of skyglows in a colourful dawn sky.

By dawn the next morning, now October 11, the tall Zodiacal Light was prominent alongside the magenta SAR arc to the north (left) and the winter Milky Way to the south (right). Thereโ€™s even a short pillar of light that might be an aurora fragment, or the tail of the comet!  

The Comet Returns 

However, toward the end of my 11-night marathon of deep-sky imaging, the bright head of the comet was to be rising into the evening sky for Part 2 of its apparition. Below is a shot from the evening of October 11, my last at Quailway. Yes, there it was, just above the Chiricahua Mountains. But it was a blip, barely visible in binoculars and to the camera. I had hoped for more. 

This is Comet Tsuchinshan-ATLAS (C/2023 A3) at far right, barely visible emerging into the evening sky and low in the twilight, on October 11, 2024. This view includes Venus at left. Venus was obvious; the comet was not!

With the Moon now waxing into the evening sky, my plan was to head back north, stopping at scenic spots on the trip home, to catch the comet over moonlit landscapes to the west in the dusk sky.

My first two nights, October 12 and 13, at the VLA Radio Observatory near Socorro, New Mexico, then farther north near Canyon de Chelly, Arizona, were both beset by clouds to the west. From images posted on-line, I knew the comet was improving. But it was eluding me. 


October 14 & 15 โ€” at Arches National Park, Utah

The next stop was Arches National Park in Utah, which I last visited in April 2015. The first nightโ€™s forecast for October 14 also looked to be cloudy. But October 15 was supposed to be clear. So I extended my stay by an extra night, thinking that might be my only chance.ย 

As it turned out October 14 was fabulous (below). The comet was easily visible to the unaided eye as a classic comet in the west. I pointed it out to folks walking by at the Windows Arches area. And I could hear other people commenting on it. At last a comet! One that anyone could see โ€” though it helped to be at a clear sky site like Arches. 

Comet Tsuchinshan-ATLAS at its finest in the evening sky, two days after its closest approach to Earth, and with it sporting a 10ยบ- to 15ยบ-long dust tail, and a narrow anti-tail pointed toward the horizon.

By then the Moon was well advanced in age to a bright gibbous phase, so the sky was by no means dark. It was deep blue in photos.

Still the comet showed up brilliantly; it had blossomed a lot in a couple of nights. Above, I framed it beside moonlit Turret Arch.

Below is a scene from the next night, October 15, my โ€œback-upโ€ night. The comet was certainly performing well after all. Even in the moonlight. In binoculars the tail stretched for the same length as the camera recorded it, some 15ยฐ. 

This is a telephoto close-up Comet Tsuchinshan-ATLAS over the red rocks of Arches National Park, Utah, on a superb moonlit night, October 15, 2024.

Indeed, that was my last view of the comet for a while, as clouds prevented any more shooting on the rest of my journey north through Idaho and Montana.ย I even hit a snowstorm in southern Montana.


Late October โ€” Back at Home in Alberta

But the comet was not done yet! Through October, while it receded from us in distance, it climbed higher into our sky, placing it into a dark sky with the Moon now out of the way.ย 

This is Comet Tsuchinshan-ATLAS in a wide-angle nightscape scene over the Badlands of Dinosaur Provincial Park, Alberta, on October 23, 2024.

On October 23, a short trip out to Dinosaur Provincial Park east of home allowed me to shoot the comet over the Alberta Badlands landscape, beside the setting summer Milky Way. 

This is a telephoto lens framing of Comet Tsuchinshan-ATLAS in Ophiuchus on the night of October 30, 2024 near several large star clusters. The field of view is 15ยบ by 10ยบ so the tail extends for about 6ยบ to 8ยบ.

By a week later, on October 30, the comet had diminished in size and brightness, but still looked like a classic comet, here framed in a telephoto close-up as it passed near some bright star clusters. This was from my front yard. The chase was over. 

Clouds and a trip to Norway starting November 4 prevented more opportunities to shoot the comet. (My travel schedule also kept me from writing this blog until now!)

It had been a good chase over a month, yielding images I was happy with. The photos from Utah and Arizona I could not have taken at home, even if the skies had been clear during the cometโ€™s prime-time. (They werenโ€™t!) And it was great to finally get back to my favourite haunts in southern Arizona and New Mexico after an absence of seven years.

In all, Comet Tsuchinshan-ATLAS provided a fine finale to what has been a superb year of stargazing events and celestial sights. 

โ€” Alan, December 9, 2024 โ€” AmazingSky.com ย