Molde Cathedral (Norwegian: Molde domkirke) with the dancing Aurora Borealis in the nightsky.
This one have been in my head for years and finally the northern lights showed up while there still was water in the fountain used as foreground. They turn of the water due to colder temperatures in the early september, just when the start of the Aurora season is upon us, so there is only a short period of time to make this photo happen.
The northern lights give us a unique window into our sun's activity, space weather and Earth's magnetic field. At any given moment, the sun is ejecting charged particles from its corona, or upper atmosphere, creating the solar wind. When that wind slams into Earth's ionosphere, or upper atmosphere, the aurora is born.
One photo with some adjustments made in Lightroom.
Canon R6 mk2, Canon EF 16-35 F/2.8.