🌌 SpacePicture of a Day: Undulatus Clouds over Las Campanas Observatory 🪐
What's happening with these clouds? While it may seem that these long and thin clouds are pointing toward the top of a hill, and that maybe a world-famous observatory is located there, only part of that is true. In terms of clouds, the formation is a chance superposition of impressively periodic undulating air currents in Earth's lower atmosphere. Undulatus, a type of Asperitas cloud, form at the peaks where the air is cool enough to cause the condensation of opaque water droplets. The wide-angle nature of the panorama creates the illusion that the clouds converge over the hill. In terms of land, there really is a world-famous observatory at the top of that peak: the Carnegie Science's Las Campanas Observatory in the Atacama Desert of Chile. The two telescope domes visible are the 6.5-meter Magellan Telescopes. The featured coincidental vista was a surprise but was captured by the phone of a quick-thinking photographer in late September. Your Sky Surprise: What picture did APOD feature on your birthday? (post 1995)
HD image: LINK 🛸
Copyright: Yuri Beletsky 🔭
Project Website: LINK 🚀
Name | Craft |
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Oleg Kononenko | ISS |
Nikolai Chub | ISS |
Tracy Caldwell Dyson | ISS |
Matthew Dominick | ISS |
Michael Barratt | ISS |
Jeanette Epps | ISS |
Alexander Grebenkin | ISS |
Butch Wilmore | ISS |
Sunita Williams | ISS |
Li Guangsu | Tiangong |
Li Cong | Tiangong |
Ye Guangfu | Tiangong |
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