By: Becky Kellogg
Published: August 27, 2013
The sun rises in the Antarctic August, 2013 after months of night.
The European Space Agency (ESA) station Concordia is seen in the
foreground. (Courtesy: ESA)
Another view of the Antarctic sunrise in August, 2013. (Courtesy: ESA)
In Antarctica, night arrives in May and lasts until August. The months-long night is referred to as polar night and occurs only inside the polar circles.
In addition to life with no sun, researchers at Concordia, and other Antarctic research stations, have to deal with bitterly cold temperatures and no chance of rescue in an emergency.
“I watch the light spread. As it approaches me, it broadens like a wide embrace; I look up and there you are, in a blaze of light,” writes Litterio. “My heart leaps and I murmur 'Welcome back.' Before today, I could never have imagined how powerful you are in the mind and heart of someone who has been deprived of you for so long.”
Litterio wrote in his ESA blog that it had been 90 days since he saw the sun.
Researchers come to the Antarctic to study a number of different subjects, including glaciers, earthquakes, and even the stress of harsh environments on people.
MORE: Other Stunning Sunrises
Grand Rapids, Mich.
Submitted by Ray Napieralski.
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