With the northern lights season in full swing again, many people are travelling to “hunt” for this elusive natural phenomenon. This and the coming seasons will become some of the best in years due to the fact we are moving towards a solar maximum, when the solar activity will be especially intense. Due to this increase in solar activity, many photographers are travelling to the Arctic to see & photograph the aurora for the first time.
Therefore, I thought it would be a great idea to highlight some of the mistakes I see most when it comes to photographing them. And yes, some of these mistakes were also mine during my early days as a northern lights photographer which means I can also speak from experience.
Let’s dive right in with one of the most common mistakes!
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1. Exposing More Than 20 Seconds For the Northern Lights
While there is much to be said on how you should expose your northern lights photographs, one thing is essential: never expose your photographs longer than 20 seconds! Especially when the northern lights aren’t that strong, many photographers are tempted to make much longer exposures.
The reason for this is that 20 seconds is more or less the point where stars stop being stars in your photographs and turn into stripes. While this is not noticeable on a small screen, you will notice this right away when you look at them on a bigger screen and especially when printed. The reason for the stripes, or star trails, is the movement of our Earth.
Additionally, creating such long exposures will blur the northern lights due to their movement while you also run the risk of overexposing them when they become more active.
2. Preferring Longer Shutter Speeds Over Higher ISO’s
Many landscape photographers tend to be very conservative when it comes to ISO due to the image noise higher ISO’s have. If you are one of these photographers, you will have to rewire your brain a bit when photographing the northern lights. As mentioned in the previous section, lengthening the shutter speed means that you will blur the northern lights. While this could work with weaker, more stagnant, northern lights, it will turn more active northern lights into a blurry green mess.
More modern cameras have much better ISO noise performance and capture great images at high ISO’s as long as your photo is well exposed. Additionally, noise can be dealt with easily in post-processing thanks to tools such as Adobe AI Denoise and Topaz. I have found that in some cases, these tools will even recover details I wouldn’t have noticed without them.
3. Not Using A Wide Enough Lens To Capture The Northern Lights
Most photographers will recommend a lens with a large aperture, such as a F2.8 or even a F1.8 lens, for photographing the aurora. While there’s certainly merit to that, as they help with low light situations, such lenses are usually incredibly expensive. On top of that, depending on what you are intending to use as a foreground, you will need to use focus stacking to compensate for the shallow depth of field.
There are of course several affordable large aperture lenses such as Canon’s 50mm Nifty Fifty (available for EF and RF lens mounts). However, generally these lenses have focal lengths situated in the 24-50mm focal range which aren’t very useful when photographing the northern lights due to their narrow field of view. Ideally you want to use a lens which has a focal range between 14mm & 18mm as the aurora is BIG. It also allows you to exaggerate the northern lights at the edges of the frame, resulting in more impressive photographs.
Some exceptions to the expensive wide aperture lenses are the superb Samyang/Rokinon 14mm F2.8 (available for Canon EF, Sony, Nikon and other brands) and Canon’s 16mm F2.8 prime lens. If you are in the market for a lens, specifically for night sky photography I can highly recommend the Samyang/Rokinon, which I used for many years. Today I use the Canon RF 14-35mm F4, which is also my lens of choice for wide-angle landscapes. I switched to this from an F2.8 lens as I pretty much always stopped down to F4 anyway. This is something I detailed in another blog.
4. Not Knowing What Infinity Is On Your Lens’ Focus Ring
While the easiest method is to try and use autofocus on a star (or even the moon) before switching your camera to manual focus, that isn’t always possible. Especially on older DSLR’s this can be difficult or downright impossible. Therefore manually focusing your lens is a method you should master. While you might think it’s just a simple matter of turning your focus ring to infinity, there is an important catch.
Throughout the years, I have noticed that not all lenses have a focus ring which is accurate – especially on cheaper lenses. What I mean with that is that when you twist the focus ring to infinity, it isn’t always exactly infinity. Therefore your image might not be as sharp as it could possibly be. It’s a good idea to test this during daylight by autofocusing to something very far away, outside the scope of the marked focus distances on your lens, to see where your lens’ focus marker actually ends up. If this is different from the infinity marker, I would recommend making a small scratch or marking onto the lens to know where infinity is.
5. Relying On The KP Index To See The Northern Lights
While this might be interpreted as a controversial statement, and some might even say it’s not true, it’s an eye opener for most people. The widely used Kp index is a pointless metric for northern lights chasers, which could potentially make you miss a potentially great display of the northern lights.
To understand why I say that you need to know what the Kp index actually is. This number signifies the disturbance of the planetary magnetic field. However, the Kp index is an estimated average over the span of three hours. It being a number that’s used as a predictor, while also being an average, makes this metric incredibly unreliable. A quick example: imagine if you have a really intense aurora but it’s only active for 10 minutes, the KP index number might be close to zero while it was still very active for a short time. I can’t even begin to count the times when a Kp value was 0 or 1 and I still witnessed incredible northern lights. This is because the northern lights aren’t static: they fluctuate in intensity, location and shape.
The misconception that the Kp index is a great metric, is fuelled by the fact many official instances (such as the Icelandic Met Office) and even more popular northern lights apps (Aurora Forecast) exclusively use it to tell you whether or not there will be a good aurora. And I admit, I have also been guilty of that when using this metric in the past. I have even said things such as “That was a Kp 7 aurora!”, which means absolutely nothing.
Throughout the years I have found only one reliable app, using useful data, to tell you whether or not there’s a fair chance to see a good northern lights display. This app is called Hello Aurora and if you haven’t installed it yet, I highly recommend you do it right now. The app is available on both iOS/iPadOS/macOS and Android.
So which metrics are important then instead of the KP index?
When using Hello Aurora, for example, you will find out about metrics such as IMF (interplanetary magnetic field) direction, IMF strength, solar wind speeds and solar wind speed density. Together with that, you get an overview of solar activity during the last sun rotation, which can be indicative of upcoming activity. And importantly, the app does an incredible job at explaining to you what these metrics mean, how they work and why they are relevant.
If you want to learn more about the northern lights and how to read all of the data you can find in apps such as Hello Aurora, I can highly, highly recommend the courses and webinars my friend Adrien Mauduit provides. He is an aurora and space weather expert, which you might know better as Night Lights Films on social media. You might have seen his incredible videos in famous documentaries such as Frozen Planet II.
Conclusion
There are an enormous amount of misconceptions and mistakes out there. These are just five of them which I’ve seen most frequently throughout my years as a photographer capturing the northern lights. There is much more to be said about photographing the northern lights and I have already shared some of it in my “How To Photograph The Northern Lights” blog article if you want to know even more.
Do you have tips for other people? Make sure to write them in the comment section!
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