🌌 SpacePicture of a Day: Diamond Dust Sky Eye 🪐
Why is there a huge eye in the sky? Diamond dust. That is an informal term for small ice crystals that form in the air and flitter to the ground. Because these crystals are geometrically shaped, they can together reflect light from the Sun or Moon to your eyes in a systematic way, causing huge halos and unusual arcs to appear. And sometimes, together the result can seem like a giant eye looking right back at you. In the featured image taken in the Ore Mountains of the Czech Republic last week, a bright Moon rising through ice fog-filled air resulted in many of these magnificent sky illusions to be visible simultaneously. Besides Moon dogs, tangent arcs, halos, and a parhelic circle, light pillars above distant lights are visible on the far left, while Jupiter and Mars can be found just inside the bottom of the 22-degree halo. Your Sky Surprise: What picture did APOD feature on your birthday? (post 1995)
HD image: LINK 🛸
Copyright: **
Jaroslav Fous
** 🔭
Project Website: LINK 🚀
Name | Craft |
---|---|
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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