Often, when I see the clouds coming from west, I try to do a high cloud sunset to see if there is something to see (like sun pillar and sunvex halos).
this day, we had mosly contrails making here and there some ice halos from my position, but nothing unusual to catch the eye (furtive sundogs, 22° halos, upper tangent and maybe Lowitz buddies but too short in time to be exploitable) (Time-Lapse of part of the day in here, South-South-East Field of View).
To find other halos at sunset, the exercice can be tricky, as the global backgroud turn progressivly to yellow then orange so the b-r rendering is more complicated, with adaptation to make in the last 30-45 mins before the end of sunset.
As I don't have automatized this, I find myself resigned to make one setting for the whole sequence to save time in my processings.
And sometimes, something catch my eye, as it did this last 16th of october, last year.
The three next images show 3 differents times of the event, with slightly different processings:
2022-10-16-[17h14à18h58]-NNW-bw-v1-[4-2]-UsM-(49)-5s5-histo-UsM-h20-h28?-h35
2022-10-16-[17h14à18h58]-NNW-bw-v2-[4-2]-UsM-(47)-7s7-UsM-histo
2022-10-16-[17h14à18h58]-NNW-bw-v2-[4-2]-UsM(56)-6s6-UsM-h28?-histo
If needed, I can provide the bw sequence, so you can see (as I do with VirtuaDub) the evolution of the display and distinguish the 28° halo with dynamic (back and forth) play on the sequence.
A sequence you will be able to see there (Version1 & Version2), but with the compression due to GoogleVideo.
Again, all raw images are still in my possession, as I guess I might not be done with this display yet.
Showing posts with label 22° halo. Show all posts
Showing posts with label 22° halo. Show all posts
Sunday, 30 April 2023
Friday, 21 April 2023
Sharp Lowitz & Parry display, in short time [2023-04-04]
Here are some nice ice halos at the passage of a particular layer of clouds, during a clear sky day (2023-04-04, from near Dole, Jura, France).
This clouds layers gave an extraodinary sharp looking display of ice halos, as I rarely saw in 15 years of watching.
I was then in the good spot at the right time, for this one.
While I was taking care of my lawn, during a clear sky day, I saw some high altitude clouds coming from the north, and decided to take the bet I will have some ice halos, but I did not epected that kind of sharp halos.
In all the below images, clouds are coming from the left (North-East).
On this first stack image, you can see the Wegener arc, with almost the part crossing the parhelic circle. There is also the 120° parhelion with reddish edge as well as on the circle.
Process is (as an example of how I do usually, for the image shown above,
named 2023-04-04-[14h57to15h37]-bw-[4-2]-UsM(11)-5s5-notrack-UsM.bmp):
→ B-R ( -bw ) rendering of all the images of the sequence ( -[14h57to15h37] ),
→ 11th stack ( (11) ) of the sequence with 4 images ( -[4 ),
→ then Unsharp mask on this stack ( -UsM ),
→ then a new stack (with Registax, without the track on the sun ( -notrack ))
→ of 5 ( -5s5 ) of last stacks (those ones taken every 2 images ( -2] ))
→ then one more Unsharp filter ( -UsM ) to end it. Later, like 5-6 minutes later, the layer of clouds enter the 46° FoV from the sun, which gave the most impressive part of the display to me. Here is one single image, with just B-R rendering (no UsM or what so ever). Then 2 stack versions witht this image along with some before and after, to see more clearly the Lowitz & Parry display, (on the above one, we can see parts of 46° halo, but not in whiole, because of the hole in the clouds crossing the view... I guess) and with the images when the clouds are on the side of the sun from my point of view. I even manage to watch clearly the circumscribed halo while i was cutting my lawn.
You can also see the left part of lower Parry arc tangent with the circumscribed halo. A last part of the display, with clouds on the bottom left of the sun, to see the extension of the lower Lowitz and the extension of the left part of the Lower Parry, tangent to the circumscribed halo.
For this stack, a "min" function is applied during the stacking process, in order to keep the minimum value of each pixel while stacking, and try to make the black forms therefore the colored halos more visible.
A crop on the left sundog, to see the Lowitz crossing and the 2 Parry arcs.
I have not presented any colored versions, because of the heterogeneous form of the clouds mask the halos for this display.
Finally, a time-lapse of the display is available here, which a compilation of differents time-lapses (one for each processing type). From those images are extracted the previous posted here :
www.flickr.com/photos/gaukouphoto/52808574767/in/dateposted/
All images are taken with Canon EoS 6D + 8mm Samyang lens from my roof windows, South-South-East side.
Settings: 1/1000s, ISO100, f/9,4, 1 image every 12s.
Sun mean height is 47° at the time of the sequence.
Google Drive folder shared, with all the images presented here, and the time-lapse.
I still have all the raws of the sequence if needed too.
Process is (as an example of how I do usually, for the image shown above,
named 2023-04-04-[14h57to15h37]-bw-[4-2]-UsM(11)-5s5-notrack-UsM.bmp):
→ B-R ( -bw ) rendering of all the images of the sequence ( -[14h57to15h37] ),
→ 11th stack ( (11) ) of the sequence with 4 images ( -[4 ),
→ then Unsharp mask on this stack ( -UsM ),
→ then a new stack (with Registax, without the track on the sun ( -notrack ))
→ of 5 ( -5s5 ) of last stacks (those ones taken every 2 images ( -2] ))
→ then one more Unsharp filter ( -UsM ) to end it. Later, like 5-6 minutes later, the layer of clouds enter the 46° FoV from the sun, which gave the most impressive part of the display to me. Here is one single image, with just B-R rendering (no UsM or what so ever). Then 2 stack versions witht this image along with some before and after, to see more clearly the Lowitz & Parry display, (on the above one, we can see parts of 46° halo, but not in whiole, because of the hole in the clouds crossing the view... I guess) and with the images when the clouds are on the side of the sun from my point of view. I even manage to watch clearly the circumscribed halo while i was cutting my lawn.
You can also see the left part of lower Parry arc tangent with the circumscribed halo. A last part of the display, with clouds on the bottom left of the sun, to see the extension of the lower Lowitz and the extension of the left part of the Lower Parry, tangent to the circumscribed halo.
For this stack, a "min" function is applied during the stacking process, in order to keep the minimum value of each pixel while stacking, and try to make the black forms therefore the colored halos more visible.
A crop on the left sundog, to see the Lowitz crossing and the 2 Parry arcs.
I have not presented any colored versions, because of the heterogeneous form of the clouds mask the halos for this display.
Finally, a time-lapse of the display is available here, which a compilation of differents time-lapses (one for each processing type). From those images are extracted the previous posted here :
www.flickr.com/photos/gaukouphoto/52808574767/in/dateposted/
All images are taken with Canon EoS 6D + 8mm Samyang lens from my roof windows, South-South-East side.
Settings: 1/1000s, ISO100, f/9,4, 1 image every 12s.
Sun mean height is 47° at the time of the sequence.
Google Drive folder shared, with all the images presented here, and the time-lapse.
I still have all the raws of the sequence if needed too.
Friday, 24 March 2023
Odd Radius Display Including 13° Halo, Vilnius, Lithuania 18th March 2023
The display occurred on 18 of March and I observed it from Vilnius, Lithuania.
For the whole day, cirrostratus clouds covered the entire sky. The clouds were moving eastward and also sublimating.
I started observing at 10:25 EET. At that time there were already odd radius halos present: with the naked eye, you could definitely notice both the 9° and 18° halos.
At 11:45, only the 9° halo was present, and at 12:00 the odd radius halos disappeared. After that, and until around 17:00, there were a faint 22° halo and tangent arc visible.
I photographed the halos in raw format with a DSLR camera. After enhancing the images, a 35° halo became visible, but I was surprised the most to see a ring between 9° and 18° halos, which appeared to be a 13° halo. After sending the images to The Halo Vault, I got a confirmation about this from Nicolas Lefaudeux and the Halo Vault team.
Here are some pictures from the display, last two of them in the sequence were processed by Nicolas Lefaudeux:
![]() |
(All images copyright Donatas Gražulis) |
![]() |
(Image processed by Nicolas Lefaudeux) |
![]() |
(Image processed by Nicolas Lefaudeux) |
A similar feature appears in an older photograph that I took on 25 of June 2019. This is the only photo from that day that this appears in; it was taken with a phone:
- Donatas Gražulis
Labels:
13° halo,
18° halo,
22° halo,
35° halo,
9° halo,
Lithuania,
odd radius,
tangent arc,
Vilnius
Thursday, 5 April 2018
Pyramidal Crystals Attacked Hungary
![]() |
Photo by: Károly Tuszinger - Budapest, Hungary (single frame) |
Despite the government’s efforts to stop “invaders” at the border, a lot
of pyramidal ice crystals could penetrate our homeland on the 3rd of April. At
least 3 legions of them rushed across the country arriving from West and
reaching the Eastern borders late in the afternoon. The attack had left a lot
of people with severely high adrenaline levels – and a lot of excellent
photographs!
The first signs of the display appeared at early dawn when a vivid
circumscribed lunar halo formed with some moondogs, faint CZA and easily visible,
still faint supralateral arc. In some pics an extremely faint 9d halo was
noticed later (I could not see it while being outside). Then after sunrise in
the early morning, parts of 18d arcs were visible, probably they were 18d
parhelia, but this only lasted a very few minutes and they were also faint. For
some hours nothing happened, then at noon another pyramidal crystal containing
cirrus arrived and caused a fine display at my place which lasted for about 20
minutes. 9-18d halos were well visible and also the „22d” halo’s arc was too
broad to be a simple 22d halo. I took some pics around, but 35d was not
present. In the meanwhile the clouds drifted towards East, they were on their
way to Budapest and the surrounding area where a lot of people could observe
and capture the best of the show in the afternoon. This region had received the
elite commando of the pyramidal legions, with an extremely vivid display; the
arcs were easily seen even on the worst quality weather webcams’ images! Webcam videos of idokep.hu: Fót and Hajdúszoboszló, Hungary.
A
decent full circle 9d halo with colourful 9d parhelia appeared on most pics,
the full circle 18d halo with vivid 18d parhelia was also present, 23d full
circles with some cases of 23d upper parhelion (or at least the arc’s colour
was much more vivid at the location of the 23d upper parhelion). One wide angle
pic shows signs of a very faint 35d arc too. The show lasted about an hour (at
least the N parts of the capital). Then the clouds drifted on towards the East
and caused a less spectacular but still fine display late afternoon. The
northern half of the country was affected by the display or at least parts of
it during the day.
![]() |
35d halo on the single frame image of Péter Lenkei from Ötschergraben, Austria |
Of course this is the case when stacking would lure out more
detail, but most people just rushed out from their workplaces to capture the
rarity with their cellphone cameras, still the beauty of the show was that even
without stacking many details were visible.
I guess it was very lucky that the
clouds had done their best in the Budapest area where most of the population
concentrates, so many observers could capture the show. I can’t remember any similar
case of pyramidal display in Hungary in the past 20 years, it was so vivid, so
widespread and so complex!
By: Mónika Landy-Gyebnár
Wednesday, 18 October 2017
Display of 3rd August 2017 in Pskov oblast, Russia
![]() |
Every frame of animation is stack which covers 2,5 min. Colored version is here |
-well defined upper and middle Lowitz arcs (1) and possible lower Lowitz arc (2)
-part of helic arc (3)
-supralateral Tape arc (4)
Labels:
22° halo,
46° halo,
circumzenithal arc,
helic arc,
lower Lowitz arc,
middle Lowitz arc,
parhelia,
parhelic circle,
supralateral arc,
upper Lowitz arc,
upper suncave Parry arc,
upper tangent arc,
upper Tape arc
Saturday, 16 September 2017
Finnish Display 2nd September 2017
Kimmo Laitinen captured a nice display with Wegener arcs and a really strong lower tangent arc on the 2nd September 2017. I'll let Kimmo describe his observation in greater detail in his own words.
He says, "we drove from Siilinjarvi to our summer house in Leppavirta via Kuopio. In Siilinjarvi the weather was sunny but before Kuopio a thin uniform layer of high clouds covered the sun and we spotted the first halos as we passed the city centre of Kuopio about 11.45.... At this point the 22 deg lower tangent arc was not so impressive and only a short section of the parhelic circle could be seen. Then we went on southward to the Puutossalmi cable ferry.... In Puutossalmi the 22 deg lower tangent arc was the most impressive and reflected nicely from the lake. After the ferry the 22 deg lower tangent arc disappeared but the parhelic circle became all the time longer and a very faint Wegener arc was seen by the naked eye. After driving a few km more southward the low clouds disappeared from the northern sky and the parhelic circle became complete about 12.30 in the village of Lansi-Saamainen in Leppävirta. The 120 deg parhelia were clearly visible and the intersection of the Wegener arcs with the parhelic circle was revealed from the images. After this the display got dimmer but still lasted for a few hours.
He says, "we drove from Siilinjarvi to our summer house in Leppavirta via Kuopio. In Siilinjarvi the weather was sunny but before Kuopio a thin uniform layer of high clouds covered the sun and we spotted the first halos as we passed the city centre of Kuopio about 11.45.... At this point the 22 deg lower tangent arc was not so impressive and only a short section of the parhelic circle could be seen. Then we went on southward to the Puutossalmi cable ferry.... In Puutossalmi the 22 deg lower tangent arc was the most impressive and reflected nicely from the lake. After the ferry the 22 deg lower tangent arc disappeared but the parhelic circle became all the time longer and a very faint Wegener arc was seen by the naked eye. After driving a few km more southward the low clouds disappeared from the northern sky and the parhelic circle became complete about 12.30 in the village of Lansi-Saamainen in Leppävirta. The 120 deg parhelia were clearly visible and the intersection of the Wegener arcs with the parhelic circle was revealed from the images. After this the display got dimmer but still lasted for a few hours.
Labels:
120° parhelion,
22° halo,
22° parhelia,
infralateral arc,
lower tangent arc,
parhelic circle,
Parry arc,
upper tangent arc,
Wegener arc
Monday, 29 May 2017
Large scale odd radius halo complex on Memorial Holiday 5-29-17
About an hour before midday a layer of cirrus stratus clouds began moving toward the sun and I looked up and saw a colorful 22d halo and I noticed it looked doubled all the way around and looking close to the sun I saw weak 9d halo. I grabbed my camera and then it got spectacular. The 24d halo not only was bright it was sharp and complete and was my best yet to date. While taking picture after picture I saw a segment of a larger halo appear and it turned out the be 35d halo. As the clouds moved thru it peaked with a total of 5 rings the 9,20,22,24, and 35d halos and the 35d halo I got today was my best to date. This could be my best pyramidal display to date but who knows I could get better some day.
Friday, 14 April 2017
Recent displays from St Petersburg, Russia
In this post, I'm including the most interesting displays observed during the last month.
14th March 2017
On that day, halos appeared in the morning in separate cirrus clouds. Their arrival was not predicted by the meteogram. When I looked out from the window, I saw a bright CZA, but when I came down, it had disappeared. Nevertheless, I could see the weak supralateral arc. Half an hour later, I also saw a nice infralateral arc, when the cirrus cloud reached the horizon.
29th March 2017
In the evening bright parhelion was detected, and then a little while later also the wide circumzenithal arc. The halos were produced by the anvil of a convection cell.
14th March 2017
On that day, halos appeared in the morning in separate cirrus clouds. Their arrival was not predicted by the meteogram. When I looked out from the window, I saw a bright CZA, but when I came down, it had disappeared. Nevertheless, I could see the weak supralateral arc. Half an hour later, I also saw a nice infralateral arc, when the cirrus cloud reached the horizon.
29th March 2017
In the evening bright parhelion was detected, and then a little while later also the wide circumzenithal arc. The halos were produced by the anvil of a convection cell.
1st April 2017
In the morning, at 10-00, the sky was clear. But in the south-west direction, low over the horizon a lot of cirrus clouds were visible. Their arrival was extended for an hour and a half. When a border of a front of cirrus clouds started to arrive, I noticed that it was weak and almost transparent. When these weak clouds reached the sun, at first I did not notice any halos. But soon, some markers of sub-visual odd radius display appeared.
It was broad and undefined halo in 22° area, with pretty obvious upper 23° plate arc in some moments. In the reflection of my sunglasses these things were visible a lot better. These weak odd radius halos were visible for around a half of hour, or even more while the area of weak cirrus crossed the sun.
Then, on the right-hand side pretty bright 22° halo started to appear. It was the arrival of main part of cirrus. In that area clouds were common and solid. After few minutes both bright tangent arcs appeared. Lower tangent arc was brighter than upper. I also noticed big infralateral arc on the right-hand side. It was pretty weak, but well coloured. I could see the arc better when I used peripheral vision.
This peak of the display was rather lengthy, and during its course I also watched both 120° parhelia, parhelic circle (it was easily seen within 22° ring), and the top part of 46° halo (likely it was the combination of supralateral arc and 46 halo. Although both were weak, together they became visually visible).
The peak was interrupted when middle-level cloud started to arrive. Then I saw a couple times only bright 22° halo
7th April 2017
The display looked quite ordinary, so I was glad I detected pyramidal halos such as upper 23° plate arc and 9° column arc.
9th April 2017
On that day, there was only a weak 22° halo. But the stack discovered also 18° halo/18° plate arc
10th April 2017
It was the weak display, which lasted most of the day. There was no suspicion that there may be pyramidal halos. But still I got upper 23° plate, 18° plate arc and 9° halo in the stacks.
9th April 2017
On that day, there was only a weak 22° halo. But the stack discovered also 18° halo/18° plate arc
10th April 2017
It was the weak display, which lasted most of the day. There was no suspicion that there may be pyramidal halos. But still I got upper 23° plate, 18° plate arc and 9° halo in the stacks.
Labels:
120° parhelion,
18° halo,
22° halo,
23° plate arc,
46° halo,
9° column arc,
circumzenithal arc,
infralateral arc,
meteogram,
parhelic circle,
St. Petersburg,
supralateral arc,
tangent arc
Thursday, 6 April 2017
9° Halo
Sunday, 26 March 2017
Halo Phenomena in Olaus Magnus’s Historia de Gentibus Septentrionalibus (Part 2)
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Halo phenomena in Historia de Gentibus Septentrionalibus, Bk. 1, Ch, 14. Image from www.avrosys.nu |
The Swedish Olaus Magnus’s 16th century Historia de Gentibus Septentrionalibus (History of the Nordic Peoples) has several chapters and woodcuts dedicated to halos. The first part of our series introduced this medieval best-selling work, and concentrated on parhelia and paraselenae as described by Olaus. This time the halos of Book 1, Chapter 14 are to be introduced, which is the very first section of his work where he deals with halo phenomena.
We don’t know whether Olaus saw any halos in his life, though in Chapter 17, he notes that there were three suns and moons in the sky at the time of his birth. Besides classical natural historical authorities like Pliny the Elder, his information comes most probably from accounts collected during his journeys, which he later recorded according to his own understanding and imagination. He introduces halos as seasonal phenomena, which are connected to early spring and hardly last longer than two and a half hours. He does not even start the list of halo forms with the most frequent ones: the first halos that he describes are the parhelic circle and three patches on it which could be interpreted as the 120° parhelia and the anthelion.
“Up in the north when deep snow covers the earth round about the vernal equinox, circles sometimes appear with the following formation and position. The most spacious circle, spread over the horizon is entirely white, as also are three small circles, each hanging separately from its circumference; towards the east, however, these are distinguished by their yellow colour, as if they are trying to resemble the sun (…)”
Olaus then continues his presentation with the more frequent forms. The 22° halo, the parhelia and the upper tangent arc are easily recognizable, and so is the circumzenith arc. But what comes afterwards (a blackish rainbow and a dusky but colourful one) is more difficult to interpret. We could deduce from their position in the woodcut that he may be talking about supra- and infralateral arcs, but since the depiction and the description are not obvious and they contradict to what such arcs look like in reality, we should not draw further conclusions from them. Olaus’s description is typical of similar accounts: he presents events which took place over a longer stretch of time, disregarding the changes in halo forms as time passes, what is more, he probably never witnessed such halos in the sky.
“(…) and even the body of the sun can be surrounded by a corona or halo of rainbow hues, and has reddish likenesses of itself attached on either side. From these likenesses, or if you wish, from these two suns, two semicircles, like bows, rise to intersect each other; eventually, after expanding as halos do, they vanish. Around the navel or centre of the most spacious of these circles can be seen an inverted rainbow, which gleams in a cloud of fine vapour. Next there appears another blackish rainbow, opposite to the first in colour and position. Afterwards this bow, dusky but ever varying in colour, as is customary with the celestial arc or rainbow, extends towards the south, crossing through the most spacious of the circles.”
Vädersolstavlan by Jacob Heinrich Elbfas. Image from Wikipedia |
The woodcut illustrating his chapter might look familiar to people interested in historical displays. It bears resemblance to Vädersolstavlan, an oil-on-panel painting by another Swedish man, Jacob Heinrich Elbfas. The painting is the 17th century copy of the now lost original ordered by the Swedish reformer Olaus Petri, and created by Urban Målare. It shows the halos that appeared over Stockholm on 20 April 1535, 20 years before Olaus Magnus’s book was published. The country at this time was turning to the Lutheran faith, and religious reformation fuelled serious conflicts and controversies between the ruthless reformer king Gustav Vasa, and more moderate Protestants like Olaus Petri. Both parties saw a celestial sign in the appearance of this halo phenomenon, and we can easily deduce that the Catholic Church was also prone to interpreting the halo as a divine premonition. Olaus Magnus himself was the last Catholic archbishop of Uppsala, who had to live in exile for the rest of his life after Sweden had turned to the new religion. Although he does not mention the ominous 1535 Stockholm halo and its contemporary reception, but the striking similarity between the woodcut and Vädersolstavlan might indicate a conscious choice for deciding to start his description of halos in Historia de Gentibus Septentrionalibus with this very emblematic appearance.
Either influenced by his own fate, or due to contemporary superstitions, Olaus attributes bad omens to such halos. Much of his chapter elaborates on what misery they may bring. As he claims, they “always cause, either by their own nature or for some other, hidden reason, the worst consequences in the time immediately following them: for example, ominous thunderings and thunderbolts which throw houses and animals to the ground; capturing and killing of nobles and common folk, and pillaging of the people in that region, not to speak of enemy fleets, pirate raids, and acts of arson; and when the circles disappear at the end of spring, grains of suphur commonly rain down in a stinking mist.”
By Ágnes Kiricsi
English translation by Peter Fisher and Humphrey Higgens from: Olaus Magnus, A Description of the Northern Peoples, 1555, Vol. 1. Ed.: Peter Foote, Hakluyt Society, 1996.
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