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BBC News
01-05-2025
- Climate
- BBC News
Your photos as West Midlands basks in the sun
Thursday marked the hottest start to May on record in the across the West Midlands reached a balmy 26C in places, just 2C cooler than some of the best photos of the day taken by our BBC Weather long run of warm weather looks set to end over the bank holiday weekend however, dipping to 14C by Monday. We love to feature your photographs of the West can upload them via BBC Weather Watchers or email us at midlandstoday@ For inspiration, view some top tips from three of England's Big Picture emailing pictures, please make sure you include the following information:The full name of the person who took the pictures (as this person owns the copyright)Confirmation that the copyright holder gives permission for the BBC to use their pictures across all its outputsThe location, date and time the pictures were takenYour telephone number so we can get back to you if we have any further other details about the pictures that may be useful for us to know Follow for more pictures on Instagram from BBC Birmingham, BBC Coventry & Warwickshire, BBC Hereford & Worcester, BBC Shropshire, BBC Stoke & Staffordshire and BBC Wolverhampton & Black Country.


BBC News
11-02-2025
- Climate
- BBC News
Northern Lights shimmer over Scotland in stunning photos
The Northern Lights have splashed vivid colour across Scotland's night skies, with stunning images captured by BBC Weather lights, also known as aurora borealis, have been making an appearance over the past two nights due to a recent increase in solar aurora signal is not looking as strong for Tuesday night but many parts of Scotland will have clear in the Shetland Islands have the best chance of spotting them. What used to be a once-in-a-lifetime event for people in the UK – or a bucket list trip to the Arctic circle – has become more common in the last couple of auroras were particularly visible in 2024 due to the biggest geomagnetic storm since 2003, according to Sean Elvidge, a professor in space environment at the University of advise using a long exposure camera when trying to capture the auroras, as the phenomenon is not always visible with the naked eye. Aurora displays occur when charged particles collide with gases in the Earth's atmosphere around the magnetic poles. As they collide, light is emitted at various wavelengths, creating colourful displays in the auroras are most commonly seen over high polar latitudes, and are chiefly influenced by geomagnetic storms, which originate from activity on the Sun. The UK saw more of the Northern Lights in 2024 than in many recent years. Increased UK sightings have been helped by the Sun reaching a "maximum" in its 11-year solar this maximum, the number of sunspots increases which leads to more Coronal Mass Ejections sending charged particles to Earth, creating the aurora. With overall high activity on the Sun with lots of sunspots, there is a high chance we'll get more of these Coronal Mass Ejections directed to Earth in the coming experts say whilst it will still be possible to see the Northern Lights in the UK once the Sun passes its peak, stargazers should expect a "gradual decline" in visibility.