A spectacular display of the Northern Lights at 11pm on Monday evening at St Andrew's Church, Shotley in Northumberland.
The aurora on display at St Andrew’s Church, Shotley in Northumberland (Picture: Ian Sproat/pictureexclusive.com)

Stargazers who stayed up late on Monday night were well rewarded, as the UK was treated to a spectacular display of meteors backlit by the Northern Lights.

The Perseid meteor shower happens every August, but it can’t always be seen as easily. Clear, dark skies and the aurora borealis made last night’s one to remember, with photographs from last night showing stunning scenes.

If you slept too early, though, there is still a chance this evening.

Jim Wild, professor of space physics at Lancaster University, told Metro.co.uk: ‘It’s possible that there will be more displays tonight. There are a pair of clouds of solar material heading in the Earth’s direction that may deliver a glancing blow to the Earth’s magnetic field.

‘If this happens, geomagnetic activity will increase again and auroral displays could be visible if you have clear dark skies.’

Although the highest peak of the Perseid meteors happened yesterday, they will be visible almost all month, with numbers significantly higher between August 9 and 16.

Up Next

Video: Yorkshire treated to breathtaking combo of Northern lights and Perseid meteor shower

The aurora borealis dazzled sky watchers in Northern England alongside the Perseid meteor shower.

Read the full story »

‘Nothing I’ve ever seen’

Ian Sproat, who took his camera out to rural Northumberland last night, said: ‘What an evening, absolutely amazing. Managed to find myself a little church right out in the sticks, it was beautiful.

‘Lovely dark skies, and the aurora was clearly visible in the naked eye, unlike anything I’ve seen.’

He said he was taken by surprise by the strength of the ‘magical’ aurora, saying it reminded him of the ‘one in a lifetime kind of show’ when the UK saw the lights strongly on May 10.

A spectacular display of the Northern Lights over a sunflower field on Salisbury Plain in Wiltshire
A spectacular display of the Northern Lights over a sunflower field on Salisbury Plain in Wiltshire (Picture: Nick Bull/pictureexclusive.com)
Northern lights over a tree near Dunsford on the edge of Dartmoor, Devon
Northern lights over a tree near Dunsford on the edge of Dartmoor, Devon (Picture: Alamy Live News)

Many were already staying up late for the Perseids, which give more notice of their arrival, always peaking around August 12 during an active period between July 17 and August 24.

Up to 100 meteors an hour were expected, as the Earth passes through a cloud of cometary dust – and there is still a chance of seeing them again tonight.

If you missed last night, you missed the peak of the display, but you haven’t missed it entirely and still have the chance to wish on a shooting star.

The event is associated with the dusty debris left by Comet Swift-Tuttle, which orbits the sun once every 133 years.

Minster on Sea, Kent, last night
Minster on Sea, Kent, last night (Picture: Alamy Live News)
The Northern Lights over Mudeford Spit beach huts near Christchurch in Dorset at 1.45am this morning
The Northern Lights over Mudeford Spit beach huts near Christchurch in Dorset at 1.45am this morning (Picture: Steve Hogan/pictureexclusive.com)

The meteoroids from the comet, mostly no bigger than a grain of sand but some the size of a pea, burn up as they hit the Earth’s atmosphere at 36 miles per second, to produce a shooting stream of light in the sky.

Jess Lee, astronomy education officer at the Royal Observatory Greenwich, said: ‘This year, due to the current phase of the Moon, the sky should be dark enough for many of the shooting stars to be visible.’

She added that the best view of the shower would be in areas that had clear skies and that were away from light pollution.

The aurora borealis appears over Bamburgh Lighthouse, in Northumberland on the North East coast of England
The aurora borealis appears over Bamburgh Lighthouse, in Northumberland on the North East coast of England (Picture: Owen Humphreys/PA Wire)

Ms Lee said: ‘If you do want to spot some meteors, try to go out after midnight, as far from any streetlights as you can, to an area with lots of the sky visible if possible.

‘It’s then just a case of getting comfortable, looking up, and waiting.’

The Perseids are named after the constellation of Perseus, because if you trace the meteors back across the sky they appear to have come from that area.

Get in touch with our news team by emailing us at [email protected].

For more stories like this, check our news page.

MORE : Map shows where to find Banksy’s best graffiti after spate of new London artworks

MORE : Dodge this borough if you want to avoid the worst traffic in London

MORE : Holiday spot that welcomed 33,000,000 tourists last year tops ‘heat death list’