Credit & Copyright: Stéphane  
Vetter  
(Nuits sacrées)  
  
   
  
Explanation:
Not from a snowglobe, this expansive fisheye  
view of ice and sky was captured on February 1, from  
Jökulsárlón Beach,  
southeast Iceland, planet Earth.  
  
Chunks of glacial ice on the black sand beach glisten in the  
light of a nearly full moon surrounded by  
a shining halo.  
  
The 22 degree lunar halo itself is created by ice crystals in  
high, thin clouds refracting the moonlight.  
  
Despite the bright moonlight, curtains of aurora still  
dance through the surreal scene.  
  
In early February,  
their activity was triggered by Earth's restless magnetosphere  
and the energetic wind from a  
coronal hole  
near the Sun's south pole.  
  
Bright Jupiter, also near opposition, is visible at the  
left, beyond the icy lunar halo.  
  
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NASA Official: Jay Norris. Specific rights apply.
A service of: LHEA at NASA / GSFC
& Michigan Tech. U.
| Публикации с ключевыми словами:
aurora - iceland - Луна - гало - лед - полярное сияние Публикации со словами: aurora - iceland - Луна - гало - лед - полярное сияние | |
| См. также: Все публикации на ту же тему >> | |

 
