Strange Skies
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Question

Strange orange object seen in New Zealand's sky

Orange Obect in Sky
© Screen Capture
A Kawerau woman says a "hard to miss" strange glowing object in the night sky has her baffled. (Watch video)

Rebecca Couchman was standing on her deck in Kawerau with her partner and a friend on Wednesday night when they all witnessed "a strange object in the sky that did not look normal".

"It was orange/red and moving across the sky. There was no sound at all. It was silent."

She said she did not believe it was a plane.

"We were standing out on the deck and it was hard to miss but right across the sky was an orange/red light moving fairly fast heading out towards Maketu way then all of a sudden it just disappeared.

"There was three of us and none of us have ever seen anything like it before.

Rainbow

'Fire rainbow' phenomenon seen around Puget Sound, Washington

Puget Sounds fire rainbow
© Rakan AlDuaij Photography
What looks like a rainbow in the clouds and is sometimes called a "fire rainbow" isn't a rainbow at all.

It's a "circumhorizontal arc," a phenomenon that occurs when the sun interacts with ice crystals in high cirrus clouds overhead.
Puget Sound fire rainbow
© Stevens Pass
The ice crystals in the clouds cause sunlight to refract or bend -- creating a rainbow appearance.
Puget Sounds fire rainbow
© Tara Ellis Photography
KIRO 7 viewers flooded Facebook Tuesday with images of a fire rainbow seen around northern Puget Sound.
Below, meteorologist Morgan Palmer explains the special conditions needed for a circumhorizontal arc to occur.
The ice crystals in the cirrus clouds high aloft must be shaped like plates and the wind aloft must orient those crystals at just the right angle to act as prisms for the sunlight. Also, the sun must be at an elevation above the horizon of 58 degrees or greater, which only occurs in the late spring through early fall in the Pacific Northwest. The rest of the year, the sun never gets high enough in our sky.

Comet

Comets & Asteroids - Summary for May 2016

During the month of May 2016, 2 new comets were discovered and cometary activity was detected for 1 previously discovered object (earlier designated as an asteroid).

NASA's Hubble Space Telescope imaged comet 252P/LINEAR just after it swept by Earth on March 21, 2016 while the Subaru Telescope serendipitously captured high-resolution images of comet 67P/Churyumov-Gerasimenko. Moreover a non-gravitational acceleration has been detected influencing the motion of minor planet (85990) (see below for more about these news). "Current comet magnitudes" & "Daily updated asteroid flybys" pages are available at the top of this blog (or just click on the underline text here).

The dates below refer to the date of issuance of CBET (Central Bureau Electronic Telegram) which reported the official news & designations.

Comet Discoveries

May 09 Discovery of P/2016 J1 (PANSTARRS)*
May 09 Discovery of C/2016 J2 (DENNEAU)
P/2016 J1 (PanSTARRS)
© Michael JagerP/2016 J1 (PanSTARRS)
* According to the discovery CBET, follow-up images obtained at the 3.6-m Canada-France-Hawaii Telescope atop Mauna Kea on May 6.43 showed a second comet in the field. "The two components are moving at nearly identical rates in nearly identical directions (both about 0".6/minute in p.a. about 314 deg).

The brighter component (designated component A) displays a clear and quite thin tail about 10" long in p.a. 250 deg in the May 6.43 images. The fainter object (designated component B) also displays a clear but broader tail of similar length, oriented toward p.a. about 210 deg". The available astrometry for both components and ephemerides appear on MPEC 2016-J90

Bizarro Earth

Rare form of 'space lightning' sighted over Oklahoma

On May 23rd, an enormous swarm of sprites flickered and danced across the top of a thunderstorm in Oklahoma. Almost 400 miles away in New Mexico, amateur astronomer Thomas Ashcraft trained his cameras on the display. He captured the sprites--and something more:
Rare LIghtning and Sprites
© Thomas Ashcraft
"Note the dendritic upward spray in the midst of the sprite cluster," points out Ashcraft. "That is a possible 'pop-through gigantic jet'--a rare event."

Ashcraft has posted a video of the event (watch video below) with VLF-ELF radio emissions he recorded as a soundtrack. Turn up the volume: "The deep bass sound of the lightning stroke sounds like a distant shotgun blast in the night," he says.

What is a pop-through gigantic jet? Lightning scientist Oscar van der Velde of the Technical University of Catalonia explains: "A cluster of sprites can actually warp Earth's ionosphere, bringing it down from its usual altitude of 90 km to only 40 km." This sets the stage for the jet.

Cloud Grey

Anomalous iridescent cloud suddenly forms in sky of Rizhao, China

Rizhao cloud
What is this mysterious cloud in the sky of Rizhao on May 22, 2016?

This strange cloud looking like Goku flying in the sky appeared between the clouds over the Shandong Province, China. This anomalous cloud suddenly formed in the sky of Rizhao, Shandong Province, China during the afternoon of May 22, 2016.

Pictures went then viral on Facebook and Twitter.
Rizhau cloud
I first thought it was a dragon flying in the sky.
Rizhao cloud

Rainbow

Circumhorizontal arcs spotted in Alabama's Tennessee Valley

Check out this really cool photo that Kim Johnson sent us from Arab, at approximately 11:30am Monday.
Circumhorizontal arc Arab, AL
© Kim JohnsonArab, Alabama
Kim described it as a "straight rainbow just hovering in the sky at Arab City Hall."

Cindy Bryan saw something similar, too, in Fort Payne -- about 45 miles east as the crow flies.
Circumhorizontal arc in Alabama
© Cindy BryanFort Wayne, Alabama
While it looks like a rainbow and it belongs in the atmospheric optics family, this phenomenon is actually a circumhorizon arc. It is a halo that is located beneath the sun, parallel to the horizon.

Circumhorizon arcs occur when sunlight passes through plate-oriented ice crystals suspended in the sky; these ice crystals are what make up high, thin clouds like cirrus and cirrostratus clouds, located about 16 thousand to 50 thousand feet above the ground.

As the sun rises higher in the sky, sunlight enters a portion of the ice crystal that is nearly vertical before exiting out the flat, horizontal bottom. As it does so, the light refracts and produces bright, prismatic colors. Often, the colors are more vibrant and pure than those seen in a rainbow.


Rainbow

Circumhorizontal arc creates colorful clouds around Massachusetts

Colorful clouds!
© Brian Gird
The colorful clouds are part of something called a "circumhorizontal arc," and we are getting into the time of year when we can see these at our latitude.

The colors are caused by sunlight passing through ice crystals that look like a hexagonal plate. The crystal refracts the sunlight, like a prism, and separates the light into colors that we can see (ROYGBIV). The ice crystals need to be horizontally oriented to allow the sunlight to enter the side of the crystal, get refracted inside the plate, then exit the bottom of the crystal.
Colorful clouds in MA
© WCVB 5
The reason we can now see these circumhorizontal arcs is because the sun has to be higher than 58 degrees above the horizon. You may find such arcs usually during the midday hours.

The halo actually extends 360 degrees around the sky, however, it is only visible when the refracted light is reflected off of clouds.

Bizarro Earth

Saharan dust storms linked to pathogenic Vibrio blooms

saharan dust storm
© Jeff Schmaltz, LANCE/EOSDIS MODIS Rapid Response Team at NASA GSFC The moderate resolution imaging spectroradiometer on NASA's Terra satellite acquired this natural-color image of dust sweeping off the coast of Western Sahara and Morocco on Aug. 7, 2015.
Iron, a critical element for living organisms, can be hard to hard to come by in open marine waters—except each summer, when atmospherically transported dust from north Africa's Sahara Desert provides pulses of biologically important nutrients, including iron, to the tropical marine waters of the Caribbean and southeastern U.S.

In a study published today in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, researchers from the University of Georgia found that Vibrio bacteria respond rapidly to this influx of iron-rich Saharan dust, leading to large blooms of the potentially harmful bacteria in ocean surface water.

Vibrio bacteria, common to ocean waters worldwide, are probably best known for their ability to cause serious illness in humans and other marine organisms. These bacteria are also characterized by their ability to reproduce rapidly and respond to newly available resources.

"Part of what makes these normal marine bacteria also potentially pathogenic is their ability to grow quickly when conditions are favorable, whether in a host or in the environment," said study co-author Erin Lipp, a professor of environmental health science in the UGA College of Public Health.

"While we are interested in how the population dynamics of Vibrio might cause disease, for this study we wanted to use Vibrio's opportunistic behavior as a model for how bacteria could exploit the availability of new nutrients and, in particular, iron delivered in dust."

In the laboratory, the researchers were able to show that iron in dust could cause test cultures of Vibrio to grow. To confirm these findings, the team traveled to sites in the Florida Keys and Barbados to measure the Vibrio growth during natural Saharan dust events. Not only did they observe that dissolved iron increases in ocean surface water as the dust arrived, but Vibrio grew from a background level of just 1 percent to almost 20 percent of the total microbial community within 24 hours of exposure.

Comment: Warmer sea temperatures from May to October cause the Vibrio bacterium to grow faster. People with open wounds can be exposed to the pathogen through direct contact with seawater or when they eat raw shellfish. Shellfish, including oysters, clams, and mussels, should be cooked thoroughly before eating, and raw shellfish should be avoided.


Info

Early Earth had thinner atmosphere

Early Earth's Atmosphere
© Sanjoy Som/University of Washington One of the lava flows analyzed in the study, from the shore of Australia's Beasley River. Gas bubbles that formed as the lava cooled, 2.7 billion years ago, have since filled with calcite and other minerals. The bubbles now look like white spots. Researchers compared bubble sizes from the top and bottom of the lava flows to measure the ancient air pressure.
The idea that the young Earth had a thicker atmosphere turns out to be wrong. New research from the University of Washington uses bubbles trapped in 2.7 billion-year-old rocks to show that air at that time exerted at most half the pressure of today's atmosphere.

The results, published online May 9 in Nature Geoscience, reverse the commonly accepted idea that the early Earth had a thicker atmosphere to compensate for weaker sunlight. The finding also has implications for which gases were in that atmosphere, and how biology and climate worked on the early planet.

"For the longest time, people have been thinking the atmospheric pressure might have been higher back then, because the sun was fainter," said lead author Sanjoy Som, who did the work as part of his UW doctorate in Earth and space sciences. "Our result is the opposite of what we were expecting."

The idea of using bubbles trapped in cooling lava as a "paleobarometer" to determine the weight of air in our planet's youth occurred decades ago to co-author Roger Buick, a UW professor of Earth and space sciences. Others had used the technique to measure the elevation of lavas a few million years old. To flip the idea and measure air pressure farther back in time, researchers needed a site where truly ancient lava had undisputedly formed at sea level.

Their field site in Western Australia was discovered by co-author Tim Blake of the University of Western Australia. There, the Beasley River has exposed 2.7 billion-year-old basalt lava. The lowest lava flow has "lava toes" that burrow into glassy shards, proving that molten lava plunged into seawater. The team drilled into the overlying lava flows to examine the size of the bubbles.

Camera

Kolkata, West Bengal witnesses rare red-blue 22-degree sun halo

Kolkata sun halo
© Indian Express/Subham Dutta22 degree Halo — a ring of light around the sun on Saturday on Kolkata sky.
The phenomenon was observed between 12.10 pm and 12.40 pm when the fifth and penultimate phase of Assembly elections was underway in parts of the city

A red and blue ring around the sun, popularly known as '22 degree circular halo' was sighted this afternoon in the city.

The phenomenon was observed between 12.10 pm and 12.40 pm when the fifth and penultimate phase of Assembly elections was underway in parts of the city.

The phenomenon popularly known as the 22 degree circular halo of the sun or occasionally the Moon (also called a moon ring or winter halo), occurs when the sun's or moon's rays get deflected/ refracted through the hexagonal ice crystals present in cirrus clouds, a senior researcher with the MP Birla Planetarium told.

"These kind of cirrus clouds are generally formed when water vapour freezes into ice crystals at altitudes five to ten kilometres above the earth's surface," the researcher said.

"It's a very common phenomenon in the cold countries. But in our country it's occurrence is rare and cannot be predicted... The red and blue ring around the sun was seen for around 30 minutes," he added.
Kolkata sun halo
© Saurabh Roy