Monday, 27 February 2017
Man made diamond dust
Sunday, 26 February 2017
Germania in Dove Bay
Saturday, 25 February 2017
A reflection subsun - or just rain streaks?
However, when this observation was submitted to Taivaanvahti and the reflection subsun interpretation was suggested, it was also quickly put in question by Tero Sipinen on the basis of the apparent low altitude of the stuff in which the effect appears. It seemed like ice crystals could not have occurred under those dark clouds in the middle of the summer.
Atmospheric sounding data for that day, checked by Sipinen, gives additional support: freezing point was reached not until 4 km altitude from the ground. The clouds against which the pillars show up, are clearly lower down and thus couldn't have possibly precipitated ice crystals.
So I am wondering, are these just sun lit rain streaks? According to Pitkänen, the clouds are remnants from thunder, so some rain can still be present. Actually, the intense orange twilight in the photo is probably due to falling rain. And in general, we are not used to seeing halos under cumulonimbus clouds.
Friday, 24 February 2017
Problematic arcs in a spotlight display
Do not shun away from the crappy stuff. On the night of 28/29 November 2016 diamond dust turned at one stage snowfall like, losing its glitter and much of its halos. My camera was on tripod snapping away shots and when the swarm suddenly became matte, I though of stopping photographing. But there was something that kept me going: I could discern faint long arcs on both sides of the subsun. So I let the camera run - photos might turn up something interesting.
Indeed so. The long arcs in the matte phase - shown in the single 30s exposure above - do not cross at subparhelia, but shoot past them on the outside. This is demonstrated in the collage below, where this image (lower left) and another image (upper right) from the earlier stage with subparhelia are superposed (upper left). Thus they are not the traditional arcs of Schulthess from Lowitz orientation.
In addition to the unorthodoxy of the arcs, the disappearance of parhelia and subparhelia during their occurrence is also interesting. Futher below is an animation of most frames photographed in that session (only the final decline of the display was cut out). The arcs can be discerned in photos for about 6 minutes, but the peak was short, lasting only 1-2 minutes.
So what are these arcs? I have only to give the usual answer: no idea. Some later displays, which I will post in time, seem to have them too and there are elements in those observations that point to the possibility of some kind of divergent light effect. But how that would be, divergent light simulations I have seen have not given out anything like this. So it is a mystery any which way you look at it. If they happen to be a real deal, then it must be assumed we already got photos of them in solar displays.
In the time lapse below, the arcs that are seen between the parhelia and subparhelia before the long problem arcs emerge seem themselves tricky as well. Why they do not cross over subparhelia like properly behaved Schulthess arcs are expected to do?
Thursday, 23 February 2017
Project Kern
I would like to announce an exciting new initiative aimed at the whole halo community.
Alec Jones
Wednesday, 22 February 2017
Reflection subsun, 19 April 2013
Tuesday, 21 February 2017
Split spectrum in Schulthess arcs
It has been evident in many a spotlight display, but in this case it is particularly striking: the other Schulthess arc is completely blue while the other one is predominantly red.
This is not something we see in simulations, where both components are equally coloured. In the blue-red processed image above it looks like these two arcs split the spectrum of parhelia/subparhelia in two.
I have of course no idea what is going on. Below is a more traditional version of the photo with heavily saturated colours. The display was photographed in Rovaniemi on the night of 28/29 November, 2016.
Monday, 20 February 2017
Possible 46° contact arc in Jena, Germany
46° contact arcs are something of a true rarity. In the display shown above, photographed by Marco Rank yesterday in Jena, underneath the circumzenith arc is a concentration of crystals that could be due to one of the three components of 46° contact arc.
Or maybe it is just a patch of 46° halo from poorly plate oriented crystals. Below I have made simulations with both scenarios. On the left is simulation with Lowitz crystals that give the 46° contact arc. It makes makes a somewhat better delineated effect than the 46° halo patch of the poorly oriented plate scenario on the right, and is perhaps more in accordance with the photo.
Yet this is just one photo in a sparse crystal swarm and thus not quite enough to draw firm conclusions. Whether it is 46° contact arc or 46° halo patch (or something intermediate), it is anyway interesting to notice that the Lowitz simulation gives no discernible Lowitz arcs - and that they are not seen in the photo either.
Further below are simulation parameters for the Lowitz simulation. More photos of the display are shown in Marco's post in AKM forum.
Sunday, 19 February 2017
Reflection subsun in Kajaani, Finland
Why one of the cloud rays in the image above stands out by its copper coloring? That's what was in Juho Pöllänen's mind when he posted this and a handful of other images of his sighting in Taivaanvahti.
It must be because it is a reflection subsun. A similar darker hue relative to lighter cloud rays has been evident in a couple of other observations too. Possibly the coloring takes place because of the additional distance reflection subsun light rays have to travel in the lowest layers of atmosphere.
Pöllänen took the photos on October 10, 2015. Another observation in Oulu, on May 10, 2016 by an anonymous observer, shows what appears to be a reddish reflection subsun low at the horizon.
Saturday, 18 February 2017
Another appearance of the mysterious Sub-Kern companion
The image above shows an arc that points towards the bulge in sub-Kern. Its formation is unknown. We captured the arc first time on two occasions on the night of 6/7 January 2016 in Rovaniemi. The current case was photographed in Rovaniemi too, on the night of 28/29 November 2016.
Judging from the crossing of helic arc and (what appears to be) Hastings over the 46° halo, the lamp must be around 3.5 degrees below horizon. I made some quick simulations. The upper one has plates, randoms, and Parry. Plate shaped Parry crystals were used to get the relative intensity of the helic arc and Hastings somewhat comparable to the actual arcs. Simulation has also subanthelic arc, and it seems to be present in the photo, although it is quite broad and diffuse. The lack of Parry arc in the actual display is rather curious.
To make sure that the mystery arc is not some kind of anomalous singularly occurring Tricker, the lower simulation was made with added column oriented crystals. Sure enough, location of the Tricker does not match.
The bulge in sub-Kern seems itself also anomalous and appears to be associated with the mystery arc. The bulge has not been photographed in the numerous displays without this arc.
Friday, 17 February 2017
Reflection subsun in Southern Finland
By Matti Helin
6th January, 2017, I observed a quite clear reflection subsun in the southern Finland.
Local time was around 11am. I looked outside and saw a nice sun pillar. Nothing special about it, but I decided to take a couple of photos of it anyway. I left outside rather hastily because there were clouds floating from north that would soon block the Sun.
I got the pictures and stayed for a while longer and saw the clouds running over the Sun, as I had predicted. Surprisingly, the pillar didn't disappear. I waited for a little while longer but the halo was stubborn. Then I realised, the source was not the Sun, directly, but its reflection! The sea is about ten kilometres away. It was most likely frozen, but wasn't yet covered by snow.
I also observed (probably) reflected crepuscular rays. If indeed so, it would probably be the first time ever that these two, refection subsun and reflected crepuscular rays had been photographed simultaneously.
Thursday, 16 February 2017
Reflection Subsun and the Yolo Bypass
As I walked out of the building on the end of the workday on January 25, 2017 I noticed a bright patch on the clouds in the western sky that I immediately recognized as a reflection subsun. I had previously been fortunate enough to observe this phenomenon on Feb. 1, 2008, which I photographed and submitted to Spaceweather.com. Soon after the original observation I was contacted by Ágnes Kiricsi, who informed me what it was that I had seen as well as its rarity.
Upon seeing this phenomenon again I immediately took a few photos on the spot and then began traveling down the road, stopping to take more photos when the view to the west became less obstructed by foreground objects. I also noticed that the effect seemed to be intensifying as the minutes passed. I decided to head to a hilltop a little over a mile north of my location and had hopes that I would have a better view from there. Once I arrived I was amazed at how much the reflection subsun had brightened and I took several more pictures. I wanted to continue to observe the spectacle until it disappeared but I had obligations that I needed to meet and could not stay any longer.
The conditions under which I observed this phenomenon were nearly identical for both occasions. These included the time of year, the hour of day, the clouds and their positions, and very importantly, a very wet winter leading up to the observing date. This last factor adds uniqueness to the reflection subsun occurances that I witnessed due to the fact that the required reflective body of water is normally not even in existence! Approximately 60 miles west of my observing location in Auburn, California is a long north-south flood plain called the Yolo Bypass. It is normally dry but during periods of excessive precipitation it floods (by design) with water that the Sacramento River cannot contain safely. My local winter in 2008 was sufficiently rainy to fill this region with water but then the Bypass remained mostly dry every successive year until it flooded again in 2017. I will be sure to be looking for the reflection subsun on afternoons whenever the Bypass is full and the sun is obscured by altocumulus clouds.
By Steve Sumner
Wednesday, 15 February 2017
The Austro-Hungarian North Pole Expedition and the Fake Sun
The 1 May 1875 issue of the Illustrirte Zeitung appeared with an exotic image showing a halo effect not much talked about. There seem to be two suns in the sky directly above each other. This could be the fake sun, or double sun effect, which is actually part of a sun pillar and can be observed when ice crystals are precipitating from the virga of Stratocumulus or Altocumulus clouds. The real Sun is covered by the edge of the cloud and the deceptive fake sun can be observed just above or below it on the icy virga. The phenomenon can easily fool a naïve observer, as this brightening looks very much like the real Sun.
Monday, 13 February 2017
Two observations of the Kern arc in cirrus
http://www.taivaanvahti.fi/observations/show/38958 for the June case.
In overall terms, the two displays are almost identical. Apart from the Kern arc, there is little to suggest particularly strong presence of oriented plate crystals. Of course, parhelia and circumzenith arc (CZA) stand out in the processed stacks, but in single frames they don't appear too extraordinary. Furthermore, part of the CZA intensity obviously comes from Parry-oriented crystals, which are not thought to contribute to the Kern arc. Even without the Kern arc, the displays would be rather extraordinary in my opinion, thanks to the presence of Tape and helic arcs, neither one often seen in cirrus displays. The June display takes this aspect even further by additionally containing the Hastings arc. Other halos present in the displays include the common ones produced by random, column, and Lowitz orientations.
There appears to be some common thinking that the Kern arc benefits from very low solar elevation. Against that background, the solar elevations in question here seem high (16°-19° in the April case, 18°-21° in June). Had the Sun been a few degrees lower in the sky, the distance of the Kern arc from other halos of interest and from the Sun had been too much for me to catch it in the first place, as I was not specifically searching for it and my personal toolkit does not contain an all-sky lens. But after all, I am not so convinced that the solar elevation makes such a big difference, except possibly when it comes to judging the likelihood of Kern from the intensity of CZA. To illustrate the effect, I produced a set of simulations using the Halopoint software and assuming oriented plate crystals with varying aspect ratios and base shapes. The results are combined in the figure below (each panel contains solar elevations 5°, 15°, 20°, and 25°). With regular hexagons (panels on the top) I get no Kern at all. With regular triangles (bottom panels), I get a decent Kern regardless of the solar elevation, unless the crystals are very thin. Intermediate crystals in the middle row make a decent Kern only if they are thick. In none of the cases does the lowest elevation show the most intense Kern - I'd rather say the opposite is true.
Sunday, 12 February 2017
Fine Lowitz arcs in lunar diamond dust display
Saturday, 11 February 2017
Complex Halo January 21st 2017
Friday, 10 February 2017
44° parhelion in eastern Finland
Following evening an anonymous observer was fishing burbot around the same area and took photos of a lunar display showing lowervex Parry.
Thursday, 9 February 2017
Observing diamond dust halos at the Bílá ski centre
At the night between 18th and 19th January 2017 me and my friend Daniel decided to try our luck and head towards the Bílá ski centre (approx. 50 km away). Before we headed out, we checked the webcams located at the centre. All cameras showed sharp and tall light pillars extending out of every light source. Faint superparhelia were visible, too.
The crystal swarm was extending 3 km away from the centre itself. On the way there, upcoming cars spawned tall light pillars and visible parhelia.
Just as we arrived, the centre closed down and turned off the lights. We parked near the slope and noticed that it was completely overcast. The crystals were in the form of very thick fog that was hanging in the valley. More on the "weather side" later.
As we walked for a few hundred meters away from the centre, we stumbled upon a very bright lamp illuminating a local church. Only a sharp and tall light pillar was visible. But as we stayed for a little longer, the whole situation changed and superparhelia started to appear. At first they were hardly noticeable, but with each minute they were getting brighter and brighter.
We decided to try our not-so-much bright "spotlight" to see if anything interesting appeared. And yes it did. By shining the lamp towards the snowy surface, true divergence took form and divergent sub-parhelia appeared. They were eerily 3D, hanging in the air. Along with them, an extremely bright and tall light pillar was observed, too.
Now let's discuss the weather situation a little. The temperature reached below -16°C which was lower than other temperatures observed at meteorological stations (due to the topography). The ski centre was at the time actually located at the edge of a low hanging stratus that was just barely touching the mountain ridge. The snow guns then probably nucleated its lower layer and the crystals started to precipitate out. Below is a georeferenced image from the Suomi-NPP satellite along with the location of the centre. The microphysical product along with a high resolution of the image shows how the edge of a low stratus (yellow colour) extends towards our location. Now bare in mind that this image was taken approx. 1 hour after we left, so the stratus actually retreated a little by that time. There are two "branches" of a low stratus visible at the image. The right branch follows the exact location of a local dam called Šance. The left branch follows a river called Čeladenka.
- Microclimate - the topography is in the form of a depressed valley, which allows for a cool and moist air to accumulate at the bottom.
- Moisture - the river that flows through the village could possibly be a substantial source of moisture
- Snow gun additives - if I have learned well, it is the additives in the snow guns that serve as nuclei on which the crystal formation takes place. In that case, they are probably using a specific additive that makes the crystal formation so abundant.