While not a common sight, Hampton said he’s seen such occurrences about three times.
The appearance of the swirl was caught in time lapse on the Geophysical Institute’s all-sky camera and shared widely. “It created a bit of an internet storm with that spiral,” Hampton said.
Photographers out for the northern lights show also posted their photos on social media.
“This all happened as it passed over Alaska during a beautiful aurora display, stunning many night-watchers including myself,” professional photographer Todd Salat, known for stunning aurora images, told Associated Press in an email.
“Trust me, at first, I was totally bewildered,” he said. “I now know it can be explained with rocket science, but during and immediately after the experience, I thoroughly enjoyed the mysterious feeling of the unknown.”
The rocket took off from Vandenberg Space Force Base in California on Friday night with about 25 satellites as its payload.
The timing of the fuel dump and the fact it was a polar launch made the blue spiral visible over a large swath of Alaska. “And we got that really cool-looking spiral thing,” Salat noted.
In January, another spiral was seen, this time over Hawaii’s Big Island. A camera at the summit of Mauna Kea, near the National Astronomical Observatory of Japan’s Subaru telescope, captured a spiral swirling through the night sky.
Researchers have said it was from the launch of a military GPS satellite that lifted off earlier on a SpaceX rocket in Florida.