Image Credit & Copyright: Dani Caxete
Explanation: Sometimes falling ice crystals make the atmosphere into a
giant lens causing arcs and halos to appear around the Sun or Moon. This past
Saturday night was just such a time near Madrid, Spain, where a winter sky
displayed not only a bright Moon but as many as four rare lunar halos. The
brightest object, near the top of the above
image, is the Moon. Light from the Moon refracts through tumbling
hexagonal ice crystals into a 22 degree halo seen
surrounding the Moon. Elongating the 22 degree arc horizontally is a circumscribed halo caused
by column ice crystals.
More rare, some moonlight refracts through more distant tumbling ice crystals to
form a (third) rainbow-like arc 46 degrees from the Moon and appearing
here just above a picturesque winter landscape. Furthermore, part of a whole
46 degree circular halo
is also visible, so that an extremely rare -- especially for the Moon -- quadruple halo was
actually imaged. The snow-capped trees in the foreground line the road Puerto de Navacerrada in
the Sierra de
Guadarrama mountain range near Madrid. Far in the background is a famous
winter skyscape that includes Sirius, the belt of Orion, and Betelgeuse all visible between the inner and outer
arcs. Halos and arcs typically last for minutes to hours, so if you do see one
there should be time to invite family, friends or neighbors to share your unusual lensed vista of the sky.
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