Mysterious glowing 'SpaceX spirals' in the night sky are linked to rocket launches
Photos and video show a mysterious, glowing spiral swirling across Alaska's night sky on Saturday.
It's likely a cloud of excess fuel from a SpaceX rocket launched earlier that day.
"SpaceX spirals" are rare, but they may be getting more common.
Mysterious, glowing blue spirals have appeared in the night sky several times in recent months, due to SpaceX rocket launches.
The most recent of these ghostly apparitions spun across the skies over Anchorage, Alaska on Saturday, during a display of the Northern Lights.
"I was totally bewildered," Todd Salat, a local aurora hunter who was watching the spectacle, told Insider in an email.
He shared the below timelapse of the mysterious spiral swirling across the sky before it dissipated.
It almost looks like a giant galaxy popped into existence nearby. But the reality is not so fantastical.
These spirals are "absolutely definitely no doubt at all" linked to SpaceX rocket launches, Jonathan McDowell, a Harvard astrophysicist, told Insider in an email.
In fact, some space observers have begun calling them "SpaceX spirals."
The spirals are probably residual fuel the rockets released during flight at a high altitude, where the fuel turns into ice, space physicist Don Hampton told the Associated Press.
"And if it happens to be in the sunlight, when you're in the darkness on the ground, you can see it as a sort of big cloud, and sometimes it's swirly," Hampton told the AP.
SpaceX spirals, jellyfish, and smoke rings may happen more often
This is the third time in the past year that a Falcon 9 rocket has appeared to produce a SpaceX spiral.
The apparition danced among the Northern Lights for a few minutes before dissipating, according to observers. That was about three hours after SpaceX launched a Falcon 9 from California's Vandenberg Space Force Base toward the North Pole.
A similar whirlpool spiral appeared over Hawaii in January, and the National Astronomical Observatory of Japan said at the time that it was probably linked to SpaceX as well.
After a Florida launch in June 2022, a similar spiral was seen over Queenstown, New Zealand, The Washington Post reported.
"They have occasionally been seen in other contexts, particularly Russian missile defense tests," McDowell said.
The reason Falcon 9 keeps producing these spirals is that it fires its engines while deliberately "coning" — rolling in a cone-like shape — to waste fuel, according to McDowell. That happens when the rocket has more fuel than it will burn to push itself into a freefall back to Earth.
"Other rockets sometimes just vent the leftover propellant after the burn is done, but perhaps there isn't enough time to do this reliably on [Falcon 9]," McDowell said.
Falcon 9 rockets have made other colorful and ethereal formations in the sky, too. The launch that could have produced the New Zealand spiral may have also created a "smoke ring" formation in the skies above the central US, according to SpaceWeather.com.
The SpaceX rocket is also known for the "space jellyfish" it often paints across the sky as it climbs through the atmosphere.
Sightings of SpaceX spirals and other sky art may be happening more often simply because Falcon 9 launches are happening more frequently than ever before. SpaceX completed 61 rocket launches in 2022, doubling its previous single-year record. On average, that's a launch every six days.
Elon Musk has said the company is aiming for up to 100 flights in 2023 — nearly two launches per week. So there may be many more SpaceX spirals, smoke rings, and jellyfish to come.
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