markhumpage  > Mother Nature > Sky at Night
Moon, planets, star trails, space shuttle, ISS & noctilucent. A selection from my night sky gallery.
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markhumpage > Midnight darkness turns to day from the glow of noctilucent clouds captured above the Leics skyline on June 17/18th 2009. 

This remarkable photograph was taken at midnight and shows the rare phenomenon of 'night shining.' The shimmering clouds form at an altitude of around 55 miles above sea level and are made up of tiny ice droplets. Because they are so high up in the atmosphere the sun is able to illuminate the clouds from below the horizon.

Called 'noctilucent' clouds, which literally means 'night-shining' in Latin, they are normally spotted in polar regions during the summer months.

Noctilucent cloud formations are the highest on Earth where temperatures can plunge below -130C (-200F) and winds peak at 300mph. They appear in the mesosphere, which is between 30miles and 50miles above the Earth's surface. 

Clouds are made up of ice crystals and scientists are baffled as to how these form in an arid layer that is several million times drier than the Sahara Desert. But their prevalence in the summer months might be one clue. Upwelling winds in the summertime carry water vapor from the moist lower atmosphere toward the mesosphere.

Apparently the water droplets also need dust particles to stick to to create the ice crystals. This could explain why the phenomenon was first recorded in 1885, two years after the Krakatoa eruption, when several tonnes of carbon dioxide, ash and dust were emitted into the atmosphere.
However scientists do not know why the clouds have become more common since then rather than fading away. They have speculated that debris from space may be the answer.

Taken with Olympus E3, 12-60mm SWD.
markhumpage > Midnight darkness turns to day from the glow of noctilucent clouds captured above the Leics skyline on June 17/18th 2009. 

This remarkable photograph was taken at midnight and shows the rare phenomenon of 'night shining.' The shimmering clouds form at an altitude of around 55 miles above sea level and are made up of tiny ice droplets. Because they are so high up in the atmosphere the sun is able to illuminate the clouds from below the horizon.

Called 'noctilucent' clouds, which literally means 'night-shining' in Latin, they are normally spotted in polar regions during the summer months.

Noctilucent cloud formations are the highest on Earth where temperatures can plunge below -130C (-200F) and winds peak at 300mph. They appear in the mesosphere, which is between 30miles and 50miles above the Earth's surface. 

Clouds are made up of ice crystals and scientists are baffled as to how these form in an arid layer that is several million times drier than the Sahara Desert. But their prevalence in the summer months might be one clue. Upwelling winds in the summertime carry water vapor from the moist lower atmosphere toward the mesosphere.

Apparently the water droplets also need dust particles to stick to to create the ice crystals. This could explain why the phenomenon was first recorded in 1885, two years after the Krakatoa eruption, when several tonnes of carbon dioxide, ash and dust were emitted into the atmosphere.
However scientists do not know why the clouds have become more common since then rather than fading away. They have speculated that debris from space may be the answer.

Taken with Olympus E3, 12-60mm SWD.
markhumpage > Midnight darkness turns to day from the glow of noctilucent clouds captured above the Leics skyline on June 17/18th 2009. 

This remarkable photograph was taken at midnight and shows the rare phenomenon of 'night shining.' The shimmering clouds form at an altitude of around 55 miles above sea level and are made up of tiny ice droplets. Because they are so high up in the atmosphere the sun is able to illuminate the clouds from below the horizon.

Called 'noctilucent' clouds, which literally means 'night-shining' in Latin, they are normally spotted in polar regions during the summer months.

Noctilucent cloud formations are the highest on Earth where temperatures can plunge below -130C (-200F) and winds peak at 300mph. They appear in the mesosphere, which is between 30miles and 50miles above the Earth's surface. 

Clouds are made up of ice crystals and scientists are baffled as to how these form in an arid layer that is several million times drier than the Sahara Desert. But their prevalence in the summer months might be one clue. Upwelling winds in the summertime carry water vapor from the moist lower atmosphere toward the mesosphere.

Apparently the water droplets also need dust particles to stick to to create the ice crystals. This could explain why the phenomenon was first recorded in 1885, two years after the Krakatoa eruption, when several tonnes of carbon dioxide, ash and dust were emitted into the atmosphere.
However scientists do not know why the clouds have become more common since then rather than fading away. They have speculated that debris from space may be the answer.

Taken with Olympus E3, 12-60mm SWD.
markhumpage > Midnight darkness turns to day from the glow of noctilucent clouds captured above the Leics skyline on June 17/18th 2009. 

This remarkable photograph was taken at midnight and shows the rare phenomenon of 'night shining.' The shimmering clouds form at an altitude of around 55 miles above sea level and are made up of tiny ice droplets. Because they are so high up in the atmosphere the sun is able to illuminate the clouds from below the horizon.

Called 'noctilucent' clouds, which literally means 'night-shining' in Latin, they are normally spotted in polar regions during the summer months.

Noctilucent cloud formations are the highest on Earth where temperatures can plunge below -130C (-200F) and winds peak at 300mph. They appear in the mesosphere, which is between 30miles and 50miles above the Earth's surface. 

Clouds are made up of ice crystals and scientists are baffled as to how these form in an arid layer that is several million times drier than the Sahara Desert. But their prevalence in the summer months might be one clue. Upwelling winds in the summertime carry water vapor from the moist lower atmosphere toward the mesosphere.

Apparently the water droplets also need dust particles to stick to to create the ice crystals. This could explain why the phenomenon was first recorded in 1885, two years after the Krakatoa eruption, when several tonnes of carbon dioxide, ash and dust were emitted into the atmosphere.
However scientists do not know why the clouds have become more common since then rather than fading away. They have speculated that debris from space may be the answer.

Taken with Olympus E3, 12-60mm SWD.
markhumpage > waxing gibbous moon, 01 June 2009. Olympus E3, 90-250mm with x2TC
markhumpage > Really pleased with this startrail. Only managing approx 5hrs of darkness because of the long days. Taken between 1030pm and sunrise following day. May 31 2009 in Sth Leics, UK. Love the opposite curvature of the trails above and below the celestial equator. Olympus E3, 7-14mm lens. Just over 1000 exposures stacked in startrails.
markhumpage > Waxing gibbous, 31 May 2009, looking sw. Olympus E3, 90-250mm with x2 TC.
markhumpage > Waxing gibbous, 31 May 2009, looking sw. Olympus E3, 90-250mm with x2 TC.
markhumpage > Sat 30 May 2009 waxing crescent. Framed between trees at 500mm 4/3 focal length (90-250mm) lens with x 2 TC using Olympus E3. wsw sky location
Midnight darkness turns to day from the glow of noctilucent clouds captured above the Leics skyline on June 17/18th 2009.

This remarkable photograph was taken at midnight and shows the rare phenomenon of 'night shining.' The shimmering clouds form at an altitude of around 55 miles above sea level and are made up of tiny ice droplets. Because they are so high up in the atmosphere the sun is able to illuminate the clouds from below the horizon.

Called 'noctilucent' clouds, which literally means 'night-shining' in Latin, they are normally spotted in polar regions during the summer months.

Noctilucent cloud formations are the highest on Earth where temperatures can plunge below -130C (-200F) and winds peak at 300mph. They appear in the mesosphere, which is between 30miles and 50miles above the Earth's surface.

Clouds are made up of ice crystals and scientists are baffled as to how these form in an arid layer that is several million times drier than the Sahara Desert. But their prevalence in the summer months might be one clue. Upwelling winds in the summertime carry water vapor from the moist lower atmosphere toward the mesosphere.

Apparently the water droplets also need dust particles to stick to to create the ice crystals. This could explain why the phenomenon was first recorded in 1885, two years after the Krakatoa eruption, when several tonnes of carbon dioxide, ash and dust were emitted into the atmosphere.
However scientists do not know why the clouds have become more common since then rather than fading away. They have speculated that debris from space may be the answer.

Taken with Olympus E3, 12-60mm SWD.
 > Midnight darkness turns to day from the glow of noctilucent clouds captured above the Leics skyline on June 17/18th 2009. 

This remarkable photograph was taken at midnight and shows the rare phenomenon of 'night shining.' The shimmering clouds form at an altitude of around 55 miles above sea level and are made up of tiny ice droplets. Because they are so high up in the atmosphere the sun is able to illuminate the clouds from below the horizon.

Called 'noctilucent' clouds, which literally means 'night-shining' in Latin, they are normally spotted in polar regions during the summer months.

Noctilucent cloud formations are the highest on Earth where temperatures can plunge below -130C (-200F) and winds peak at 300mph. They appear in the mesosphere, which is between 30miles and 50miles above the Earth's surface. 

Clouds are made up of ice crystals and scientists are baffled as to how these form in an arid layer that is several million times drier than the Sahara Desert. But their prevalence in the summer months might be one clue. Upwelling winds in the summertime carry water vapor from the moist lower atmosphere toward the mesosphere.

Apparently the water droplets also need dust particles to stick to to create the ice crystals. This could explain why the phenomenon was first recorded in 1885, two years after the Krakatoa eruption, when several tonnes of carbon dioxide, ash and dust were emitted into the atmosphere.
However scientists do not know why the clouds have become more common since then rather than fading away. They have speculated that debris from space may be the answer.

Taken with Olympus E3, 12-60mm SWD.
Midnight darkness turns to day from the glow of noctilucent clouds captured above the Leics skyline on June 17/18th 2009.

This remarkable photograph was taken at midnight and shows the rare phenomenon of 'night shining.' The shimmering clouds form at an altitude of around 55 miles above sea level and are made up of tiny ice droplets. Because they are so high up in the atmosphere the sun is able to illuminate the clouds from below the horizon.

Called 'noctilucent' clouds, which literally means 'night-shining' in Latin, they are normally spotted in polar regions during the summer months.

Noctilucent cloud formations are the highest on Earth where temperatures can plunge below -130C (-200F) and winds peak at 300mph. They appear in the mesosphere, which is between 30miles and 50miles above the Earth's surface.

Clouds are made up of ice crystals and scientists are baffled as to how these form in an arid layer that is several million times drier than the Sahara Desert. But their prevalence in the summer months might be one clue. Upwelling winds in the summertime carry water vapor from the moist lower atmosphere toward the mesosphere.

Apparently the water droplets also need dust particles to stick to to create the ice crystals. This could explain why the phenomenon was first recorded in 1885, two years after the Krakatoa eruption, when several tonnes of carbon dioxide, ash and dust were emitted into the atmosphere.
However scientists do not know why the clouds have become more common since then rather than fading away. They have speculated that debris from space may be the answer.

Taken with Olympus E3, 12-60mm SWD.
Original size: 1536px x 562px |
Current: 400px x 146px |
Other sizes: Small • M • L • O • save photo |
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Keywords: space clouds olympus nlcs noctilucent nightime photography mark humpage
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