Auroras have long dazzled sky watchers but befuddled physicists. Via a mechanism that remains unclear, electrons get yanked away from the magnetosphere and slammed into the ionosphere, where their collisions with atoms and molecules engender green, red, and blue light. (See the Quick Study by Bob Strangeway, Physics Today, July 2008, page 68.) The leading culprits for scooping up and accelerating auroral electrons are Alfvén waves, oscillations of the ions in a plasma that propagate along magnetic field lines. The oscillations can be triggered by magnetic storms, which often portend auroral displays. And at least in theory, the waves should be able to propel electrons in their path.

Now, for the first time, scientists have confirmed that Alfvén waves can move electrons, an important first step toward linking the waves to auroras. Rather than probing plasmas at auroral altitudes, Jim Schroeder at the University of Iowa and his...

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