LONDON: Experts predict the Northern Lights will be at their brightest in 50 years in 2012 and could cause disruption of mobile phones, global positioning systems and even national grids.

The 2012 aurora will be caused by the solar maximum – a period when the sun’s magnetic field on the solar equator rotates at a slightly faster pace than at the solar poles, reports the Daily Mail.

Fast-moving charged particles from the sun, known as solar wind, interact with Earth’s atmosphere and are closely linked to the 11-year solar sunspot cycle.

The lights form high above Earth, usually above 40 miles and sometimes as much as 600 miles higher than the space shuttle travels.

The last solar maximum was in 2000 and Nasa scientists have predicted that the next one in 2012 will be the greatest since 1958, where the aurora stunned the people of Mexico by making an appearance on as many as three occasions.

Scientists have stated that the Northern Lights should at least be visible as far south as Rome in 2012.

Photographer Orvar Thorgiersson is in the middle of a project to document the growing intensity of the phenomena. “In 2012, we will have the best opportunity to view the aurora in a long time,” he said.