![]() I asked her if she could write the ending of my song in French, and she wrote a beautiful story about the flowers we picked in all of your favourite places. I wanted to include some Frenchness on the opening song as a gift to the castle that gave me a lot of the inspiration to finish this album. I knew a bit about because she's extremely sweet and very talented. And he loved art and music and he celebrated and invited people and I thought it would be a nice way to honour this French castle by having you." And this man lived in this castle like hundreds of years ago, and he was French, Marcus Gerhard. "I made my album in a castle in Norway, and it has French history. On a livestream by Pomme, Aurora further recounted how their collaboration came to be: There is so much beauty in this world, the small things as well." there's a fear that you miss out on all the beautiful things. I look at everything and am imagining in the end of the song they drive this car out to a sunset and they watch one very last sunset together and. It's about these people, the you and them me in the song, and they are going through something which forces them to think about life differently and they look at each other and they look around themselves and they just grasp that time is slipping out of their fingers too quickly. If you listen very carefully, it's a beautiful and a sad story. To me it's about - which is an important keyword for me, because it can be about something different for everyone -, but it's about two things. "I wrote it a long time ago, quite early in the process and I already knew with that song that it was a part of the vibration that I wanted the album to be. Interviewed by Bedroomdisco, Aurora said: Because the small miracles happen all the time. And somehow I feel like it makes me miss out on the small ones. I do often feel like this world is trying to make me focus on all these great miracles. I contacted a French artist, Pomme, to write the ending for me. "It's a very strange story a story I would like for people out there to figure out themselves. The NASA Hubble Space Telescope took this picture of an aurora on Jupiter using ultraviolet (UV) light.In an interview shortly after the release, Aurora stated: These swirls of red light are an aurora on the south pole of Saturn. We've seen amazing auroras on Jupiter and Saturn. If a planet has an atmosphere and magnetic field, they probably have auroras. They sure do! Auroras are not just something that happen on Earth. This is the name for an aurora in the Northern Hemisphere. These green bands of light in the winter sky above Alaska are an aurora borealis. There, the particles interact with gases in our atmosphere resulting in beautiful displays of light in the sky. When a solar storm comes toward us, some of the energy and small particles can travel down the magnetic field lines at the north and south poles into Earth's atmosphere. During one kind of solar storm called a coronal mass ejection, the Sun burps out a huge bubble of electrified gas that can travel through space at high speeds. There is a constant streaming solar wind and there are also solar storms. The protective magnetic field around Earth shields us from most of the energy and particles, and we don't even notice them.īut the Sun doesn't send the same amount of energy all the time. The Sun sends us more than heat and light it sends lots of other energy and small particles our way. This beautiful view of the aurora was taken from the International Space Station as it crossed over the southern Indian Ocean on September 17, 2011.Įven though auroras are best seen at night, they are actually caused by the Sun. If you're near the South Pole, it is called an aurora australis or the southern lights. Aurra stems from Proto-Italic auss, and ultimately from Proto-Indo-European h a éuss, the 'dawn' conceived as divine entity.It has cognates in the goddesses s, Uas, Aurin, Auseklis and astre. If you're near the North Pole, it is called an aurora borealis or northern lights. Frequently there are beautiful light shows in the sky. If you're ever near the North or South Pole, you may be in for a very special treat. Watch this video to learn all about auroras! Click here to download this video (1920x1080, 277 MB, video/mp4). ![]()
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