17/12/2025
This is what I was shown in my inner vision a couple of mornings ago.
Senja, Norway witnessed one of the rarest sky events ever recorded: towering “Tall White Auroras” rising like ghostly pillars above the horizon. Unlike the familiar greens and reds of typical auroras, these pale, almost colorless beams appear only during unusually intense geomagnetic conditions — so rare that many scientists go their entire careers without seeing one.
What makes them so strange is that even though auroras are born from charged particles colliding with gases high in the atmosphere, these appeared nearly pure white to the human eye. Some researchers suggest that the auroral emissions were so bright they overwhelmed the eye’s ability to register color, creating the illusion of white light. Others propose that ice crystals or atmospheric scattering may have intensified the effect. Whatever the cause, the result was a phenomenon that does not fit neatly into the patterns we think we understand.
Witnesses described the beams as “silent lightning” and “columns reaching into space,” rising straight upward like cathedral pillars. They seemed almost disconnected from the familiar shimmering curtains of the auroral oval, more like something out of myth than meteorology.
Events like this are a reminder that Earth's magnetic and atmospheric systems still hold mysteries. Even with satellites, all-sky cameras, and real-time solar data, nature occasionally reveals something that forces scientists to rethink what’s possible.
If these ultra-rare white auroras are appearing more frequently during heightened solar activity, the coming years may reveal even more strange and beautiful sky events we’ve barely begun to understand.