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"polar lights"
325 professional editorial images found
#11472134
12 August 2024
Wisconsin's night sky is glowing with the Northern Lights, as a geomagnetic storm is bringing vibrant pink and green colors, stealing the spotlight from the Perseus meteor shower.
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#11472135
12 August 2024
Wisconsin's night sky is glowing with the Northern Lights, as a geomagnetic storm is bringing vibrant pink and green colors, stealing the spotlight from the Perseus meteor shower.
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#11472136
12 August 2024
Wisconsin's night sky is glowing with the Northern Lights, as a geomagnetic storm is bringing vibrant pink and green colors, stealing the spotlight from the Perseus meteor shower.
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#11472137
12 August 2024
Wisconsin's night sky is glowing with the Northern Lights, as a geomagnetic storm is bringing vibrant pink and green colors, stealing the spotlight from the Perseus meteor shower.
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#11472138
12 August 2024
Wisconsin's night sky is glowing with the Northern Lights, as a geomagnetic storm is bringing vibrant pink and green colors, stealing the spotlight from the Perseus meteor shower.
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#11472139
12 August 2024
Wisconsin's night sky is glowing with the Northern Lights, as a geomagnetic storm is bringing vibrant pink and green colors, stealing the spotlight from the Perseus meteor shower.
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#11472140
12 August 2024
Wisconsin's night sky is glowing with the Northern Lights, as a geomagnetic storm is bringing vibrant pink and green colors, stealing the spotlight from the Perseus meteor shower.
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#11472141
12 August 2024
Wisconsin's night sky is glowing with the Northern Lights, as a geomagnetic storm is bringing vibrant pink and green colors, stealing the spotlight from the Perseus meteor shower.
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#11229958
12 May 2024
A view of the Northern Lights in Amsterdam, Netherlands, on May 10, 2024. The strongest solar storm in over 20 years hit Earth on Friday, creating dazzling auroras visible. As it continues through the weekend, it could potentially disrupt satellites and power grids.
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#11229960
12 May 2024
A view of the Northern Lights in Amsterdam, Netherlands, on May 10, 2024. The strongest solar storm in over 20 years hit Earth on Friday, creating dazzling auroras visible. As it continues through the weekend, it could potentially disrupt satellites and power grids.
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#11227519
11 May 2024
Northern lights appearance in the night sky from rare, geomagnetic solar storm phenomenon. Aurora borealis illumination visible in purple and green color bands from the Dutch countryside. Winterle, Netherlands on May 11, 2024
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#11227273
11 May 2024
Northern Lights illuminate the sky over L’Aquila, Italy, on May 11th, 2024. The Northern Lights, or Aurora Borealis, are dazzling light displays in the northern hemisphere caused by charged particles from the sun colliding with gases in the Earth's atmosphere. The collisions emit colorful lights, with green and red hues from oxygen and blue, purple, and pink hues from nitrogen.
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#11070288
12 March 2024
Cabbage loopers (Trichoplusia ni) are members of the Noctuidae family of owlet moths found throughout the United States, Canada, India, and Mexico. The cabbage looper caterpillar is medium-sized, green, and feeds on leaves. It can grow up to 1.5 inches long and has a distinctive looping movement when mature. Caterpillars initially hatch off-white and become pale green with distinct white stripes down each side and four light stripes down the back. They go through 5-7 instars, reaching 1 1/2 inches at maturity. Known as a typical ''measuring'' worm, the caterpillar arches its body into a loop as it crawls. Cabbage loopers are a serious pest mainly affecting cruciferous plants such as cabbage, broccoli, cauliflower, and Brussels sprouts. They create ragged holes in leaves and can bore through, contaminating heads and leaves with their bodies and frass. Early instars scrape the leaf surfaces, while later instars chew progressively larger holes. Cabbage loopers are not toxic and are generally not a threat to human health. An incident involving an insect climbing on a human hand wearing a shakha (white bangle made from a conch shell) and pola (red coral bangle) occurred at Tehatta, West Bengal, India, on March 11, 2024.
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#11070289
12 March 2024
Cabbage loopers (Trichoplusia ni) are members of the Noctuidae family of owlet moths found throughout the United States, Canada, India, and Mexico. The cabbage looper caterpillar is medium-sized, green, and feeds on leaves. It can grow up to 1.5 inches long and has a distinctive looping movement when mature. Caterpillars initially hatch off-white and become pale green with distinct white stripes down each side and four light stripes down the back. They go through 5-7 instars, reaching 1 1/2 inches at maturity. Known as a typical ''measuring'' worm, the caterpillar arches its body into a loop as it crawls. Cabbage loopers are a serious pest mainly affecting cruciferous plants such as cabbage, broccoli, cauliflower, and Brussels sprouts. They create ragged holes in leaves and can bore through, contaminating heads and leaves with their bodies and frass. Early instars scrape the leaf surfaces, while later instars chew progressively larger holes. Cabbage loopers are not toxic and are generally not a threat to human health. An incident involving an insect climbing on a human hand wearing a shakha (white bangle made from a conch shell) and pola (red coral bangle) occurred at Tehatta, West Bengal, India, on March 11, 2024.
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#11070290
12 March 2024
Cabbage loopers (Trichoplusia ni) are members of the Noctuidae family of owlet moths found throughout the United States, Canada, India, and Mexico. The cabbage looper caterpillar is medium-sized, green, and feeds on leaves. It can grow up to 1.5 inches long and has a distinctive looping movement when mature. Caterpillars initially hatch off-white and become pale green with distinct white stripes down each side and four light stripes down the back. They go through 5-7 instars, reaching 1 1/2 inches at maturity. Known as a typical ''measuring'' worm, the caterpillar arches its body into a loop as it crawls. Cabbage loopers are a serious pest mainly affecting cruciferous plants such as cabbage, broccoli, cauliflower, and Brussels sprouts. They create ragged holes in leaves and can bore through, contaminating heads and leaves with their bodies and frass. Early instars scrape the leaf surfaces, while later instars chew progressively larger holes. Cabbage loopers are not toxic and are generally not a threat to human health. An incident involving an insect climbing on a human hand wearing a shakha (white bangle made from a conch shell) and pola (red coral bangle) occurred at Tehatta, West Bengal, India, on March 11, 2024.
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#11070292
12 March 2024
Cabbage loopers (Trichoplusia ni) are members of the Noctuidae family of owlet moths found throughout the United States, Canada, India, and Mexico. The cabbage looper caterpillar is medium-sized, green, and feeds on leaves. It can grow up to 1.5 inches long and has a distinctive looping movement when mature. Caterpillars initially hatch off-white and become pale green with distinct white stripes down each side and four light stripes down the back. They go through 5-7 instars, reaching 1 1/2 inches at maturity. Known as a typical ''measuring'' worm, the caterpillar arches its body into a loop as it crawls. Cabbage loopers are a serious pest mainly affecting cruciferous plants such as cabbage, broccoli, cauliflower, and Brussels sprouts. They create ragged holes in leaves and can bore through, contaminating heads and leaves with their bodies and frass. Early instars scrape the leaf surfaces, while later instars chew progressively larger holes. Cabbage loopers are not toxic and are generally not a threat to human health. An incident involving an insect climbing on a human hand wearing a shakha (white bangle made from a conch shell) and pola (red coral bangle) occurred at Tehatta, West Bengal, India, on March 11, 2024.
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