RJN wrote:Monday, 2009 January 9
astrolabe wrote:It is tempting to steal APOD's thunder by posting a pic ahead of schedule but I don't think it fair, nor do I have any inkling as to the cause. Ice crystals reflecting ground lighting perhaps; sort of like a ground-based Gegenschein? As to the fanning (which is your real question after all) one (me) could suggest a temperature/density gradient over a few hundred feet above the concentrated light column.
This idea probably isn't even close to the collective intelligent APOD community's conclusion but it's all I've got!
Doum wrote:Error 404. So i cant see the picture.
Many people have seen light pillars. They appear during winter when city lights shine upward into the icy air. Reflections from plate-shaped crystals spread the light into a vertical column: examples.
Truhin's pillars, however, are not the ordinary kind. Even two leading experts in atmospheric optics can't quite figure them out: "These pillars are mysterious," say Les Cowley and Marko Riikonen. "They have unexplained curved tops and even curved arcs coming from their base. Arcs in rare displays like these could be from column crystals to give parts of tangent arcs, others could be the enigmatic Moilanan arc or even the recently discovered reflected Parry arc. We do not know, so take more photos on cold nights!"
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