How the Northern Lights and Digital Photography Have Boosted Astrotourism

Last August, over a calm Michigan lake, Karl Duesterhaus, 34, of Chicago, was treated to an unusual phenomenon: the northern lights, which appeared as hazy colors in a brighter-than-usual night sky. It was a cool experience, he said, but he was surprised when he looked at cellphone photos taken the night before.

“The colors were much more defined,” he said.

Mr. Duesterhaus isn’t the only one struck by the difference between the subtle colors that the naked eye registers and the vivid hues that appear in digital photos. Many travelers, some of them lured by those stunning images on social media, are also noticing the difference.

As the solar activity that causes the aurora borealis is expected to reach the peak of its 11-year cycle in the next year, opportunities to see it are booming via cruises, train trips and tours. According to the market research company Grand View Research, northern lights tourism generated $843 million in 2023 and is projected to grow at nearly 10 percent a year to 2030.

The Berkeley, Calif.-based tour company Wilderness Travel said bookings on its winter trip to Iceland — largely driven by northern lights seekers — have been up 130 percent each year on average since 2021. Demand for winter flights to Finland, a prime location for aurora-viewing, is up more than 70 percent this winter compared to last.

Winter hotel stays in coastal Tromso in northern Norway, a popular aurora destination, grew 7 percent since 2019 to more than 202,000 between January and April of 2024, according to Visit Norway. Last spring the Norway-based cruise line Hurtigruten appointed its first “chief aurora hunter,” the astronomer Tom Kerss, who will be on board its increasingly popular winter departures along the Norwegian coast.

Nature-centric travel, growing interest in astrotourism, and a greater understanding of how and when auroras occur has helped fuel the popularity of northern lights tourism. But so, too, say some aurora experts, have cellphone cameras, creating many of the colorful images appearing on social media, especially in the past year. So much so that at the Borealis Basecamp in Fairbanks, Alaska, a 40-cabin resort devoted to aurora viewing, management informs guests before they arrive of the gulf they may witness between the real life spectacle and some images. (The resort is sold out for the current fall-to-spring season.)

“We get two responses,” said Adriel Butler, the founder and chief executive of Borealis Basecamp. One is disappointment; the other more nuanced. “They’ll say, ‘All the photos are touched up and edited with bigger-than-life imagery, but what I’m going to see is actually real.’”

To understand what creates the northern lights, and how we and cameras see them differently, we turned to the experts.

Scott Engle, an assistant professor of astrophysics and planetary science at Villanova University in Villanova, Pa., described the northern lights phenomenon as the visual result of particles issued by the sun encountering the Earth’s atmosphere.

“The sun is always losing tiny bits of its own mass, which is what we call the solar wind,” he said. “They hit whatever gas is in the Earth’s atmosphere and impart their energy to it and cause it to glow.”

The sun undergoes an 11-year cycle of activity. In the past year, activity has been high, accounting for more sightings.

“When the sun’s activity is at or near maximum, the density level of these particles in the solar wind increases,” Mr. Engle said.

The lights appear within what is known as an aurora oval, a belt that roughly rings the Earth’s geomagnetic poles, said Shannon Schmoll, the director of the Abrams Planetarium at Michigan State University, in East Lansing, Mich. In the north, the oval lies above popular northern lights destinations, including Canada, Alaska and Iceland.

“With a stronger storm, that oval where we see the aurora gets pushed farther south,” Ms. Schmoll said.

Before the arrival of digital photography, getting vivid shots of the northern lights required a deep knowledge of camera exposures and film speed, good timing and some luck.

That changed around 2008 with the introduction of digital cameras that were more sensitive to low light, said Lance Keimig, a Vermont-based photographer and a partner at National Parks at Night, an organization that teaches night photography around the world.

The early light-sensitive cameras “made it possible for people already doing night photography to take it to the next level,” Mr. Keimig said, adding that the technology took off among more casual photographers with the next generation of cameras around 2012.

The advent of light-sensitive cellphone cameras before the peak of the current 11-year solar cycle, when sightings occurred as far south as Florida, made similar technology available to more aurora viewers. In 2018, Google’s Pixel Camera introduced “night sight,” which allowed sharper images in low lighting situations. The iPhone’s “night mode” arrived the following year. The evolution of photo-editing apps and lightweight gear have added to the brilliance of night photos.

Sean J. Bentley, an associate professor of physics at Adelphi University in Garden City, N.Y., cited advancements in camera technology for better imagery since the last solar cycle, which lasted from 2008 to 2019.

“Even as recently as the last peak in early 2014, most digital cameras, including basically all of those on phones, were not capable of getting good night images of even bright, stable objects such as the moon, and worse so of auroras,” Mr. Bentley wrote in an email.

Gondwana Ecotours, which has been offering aurora itineraries in Fairbanks, Alaska, since 2013, experienced a 20 percent increase in bookings on its trips over the past two seasons.

“When we first started these tours, capturing the aurora with a cellphone was impossible,” said Jared Sternberg, the president. “Now, iPhones and other smartphones can take more than decent images of the aurora.”

Technology’s lens is better than the human one when it comes to night vision. Basically, photoreceptors in the eye take two main forms, rods and cones. Rods are more sensitive to light but can’t detect colors. With enough light, cones kick in to determine colors.

“As you experience anytime you get up during the night, we don’t differentiate colors well when we are in a dark environment,” Mr. Bentley wrote.

Cameras are more effective at sensing color because they can handle a longer exposure than your eye, according to Mr. Engle, of Villanova University.

“The digital detector that your camera has is most likely much more sensitive to red wavelengths of light than your eye is and it’s going to pull out those longer, redder wavelengths much better,” Mr. Engle said.

And there are a host of other A.I.-based enhancements in cellphone cameras that can produce shots that once only high-end cameras could, including shooting many photos in quick succession and using technology to combine them for a sharper, more colorful and clear image.

Douglas Goodwin, the Fletcher Jones Scholar in Computation and a visiting assistant professor in media studies at Scripps College in Claremont, Calif., published an article on this subject in May on the Conversation, a nonprofit news site. In his article, Mr. Goodwin stripped out the enhancements commonly made by smartphone cameras to produce two images of the aurora — one that approximated the naked eye and another taken with a phone camera.

“Phones are exaggerating it a bit, but not confabulating it completely,” Mr. Goodwin said in an interview. “They’re seeing it better than we could.”

Nori Jemil, a London-based photographer and the author of “The Travel Photographer’s Way,” has taught photography classes in Iceland and Patagonia. Cellphone cameras, she said, automatically do the normal postproduction work “like photoshopping, stacking images, enhancing color and picking things out the eye can’t see. It’s not fake, but it’s using computer algorithms to bring it all together for a wow effect.”

Stay up late. According to NOAA, the lights are most active within an hour or two of midnight.

On her photo expeditions, Stephanie Vermillion, a Cleveland-based astrotourism writer and photographer and the author of “100 Nights of a Lifetime: The World’s Ultimate Adventures After Dark,” said she will scan the horizon with her cellphone camera if she can’t see any activity, “because it does see them better than me.”

She sets the camera to shoot in time lapse mode (for iPhone users she suggests the app NightCap), then watches the display with her own eyes.

“If I’m constantly fiddling with my camera, I’ll ruin the moment,” Ms. Vermillion said.

Joe Buffalo Child, who offers guided aurora-viewing through his company, North Star Adventures, in Yellowknife, in Canada’s Northwest Territories, advises viewers to try to record more than a photo. “Cellphones can capture an enhanced aurora with its built in A.I. capabilities,” he said. “However, as we always say on our tours, make sure to enjoy the auroras with your eyes and your heart.”


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