Lead astronomer at the Grassholme Observatory in County Durham, Gary Fildes, said it had been a really interesting week "because we've been exposed to two really super interesting phenomena". "One of them is the Northern Lights, which is probably everybody's favourite," he said. "And then the other was the Perseid meteor shower, which is an annual event where we see an uptick in shooting stars.

" The Northern Lights - or aurora borealis - were "difficult to predict", Mr Fildes said. "But we're right at the peak time to see them." The sun is reaching a period of "solar maximum", where it becomes more and more magnetically active during an 11-year solar cycle.

Mr Fildes said: "We're not really sure how long this is going to last, but we could expect, maybe over the next year or two, that we would be at the peak activity of the sun being capable of producing the correct conditions so that we would see the Northern Lights here on Earth." But people still need to do their homework to know when the Northern Lights will be visible. The most impressive auroras occur when the sun emits large clouds of particles called "coronal mass ejections".

"If that happens, you get about two days' notice that these particles will arrive here on Earth and produce, potentially, these big huge magnetic storms." Mr Fildes said it also "preferably" needs to be a moonless night, and it needs to be clear. The is an annual event, and will therefore next be visible in August 2025.

The Perseids pass through .