Location and timing STEVE phenomena may be spotted further from the poles than the aurora, and as of March 2018, have been observed in the United Kingdom, Canada, Alaska, northern U.S. states, Australia, New Zealand and Denmark. The phenomenon appears as a very narrow arc extending for hundreds or thousands of kilometers, aligned east–west. It generally lasts for twenty minutes to an hour. As of March 2018, STEVE phenomena have only been spotted in the presence of an aurora. None were observed from October 2016 to February 2017, or from October 2017 to February 2018, leading
NASA to believe that STEVE phenomena may only appear during certain seasons. However, STEVE phenomena have since been reported and photographed in
South Australia during a
geomagnetic storm event on 11 October 2024.
Research into cause A study published in March 2018 by
Elizabeth A. MacDonald and co-authors in the
peer-reviewed journal,
Science Advances, suggested that the STEVE phenomenon accompanies a
subauroral ion drift (SAID), a fast-moving stream of extremely hot particles. STEVE marks the first observed visual effect accompanying a SAID. One proposed mechanism for the glow is that excited
nitrogen breaks apart and interacts with
oxygen to form glowing
nitric oxide.
Association with picket-fence aurora Often, although not always, a STEVE phenomenon is observed above a green, "picket-fence"
aurora according to a study published in
Geophysical Research Letters. Although the picket-fence aurora is created through
precipitation of electrons, they appear outside the auroral oval and so their formation is different from traditional aurora. The study also showed these phenomena appear in both
hemispheres simultaneously. Sightings of picket-fence aurora have been made without observations of STEVE. The green emissions in the picket fence aurora seem to be related to eddies in the supersonic flow of charged particles, similar to the eddies seen in a river that move more slowly than the water around them. Hence, the green bars in the picket fence are moving more slowly than the structures in the purple emissions and some scientists have speculated they could be caused by turbulence in the charged particles from space. == Research ==