DuBoseJen
664 posts

DuBoseJen
@DuBosefire
America First no DM’s Mom Strong creative soul
Katılım Nisan 2026
116 Takip Edilen315 Takipçiler
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@NightSkyToday Cool I love the pyramids yours are perfect I love the meteor it’s a lot to it
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RING OF FIRE WITH A SOLAR HALO AT SUNSET
The Moon lines up just right and leaves a razor-thin circle of sunlight around its edge.
This is an annular solar eclipse (the “ring of fire”). The Moon is a little farther from Earth than usual, so it looks slightly smaller in the sky and can’t cover the Sun completely. That’s why you get a bright circle instead of full darkness.
And the faint arch sitting above it? That’s the part that makes this scene feel unreal: a 22° solar halo forming in a thin, icy cloud layer. High-altitude hexagonal ice crystals (in cirrostratus clouds) act like tiny prisms. Light bends through them at a very specific angle, so the halo appears as a soft ring/arc at a fixed distance from the Sun. When the Sun is low, you often only catch the upper section of the halo — exactly like this.
The warm orange haze comes from the low Sun angle too: sunlight travels through more atmosphere at sunset, scattering the blues out and leaving the reds and golds.
Late evening over the Gulf Coast near Pensacola, Florida — ocean calm, thin cloud sheet overhead, and a once-in-a-lifetime overlap.

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