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2 thoughts on “A lower sunpillar, sub-sun and sub-parhelion spotted at 35000 feet over Missouri, US.”

  1. Patrick Dennis avatar Patrick Dennis says:

    Thanks Rebecca. I fly a lot over the central US and this was the third time in the last 18 months that I was fortunate to spot a subsun and subsun sundog at altitude with a thin layer of cirrostratus at or just below the plane.

  2. Rebecca Hill avatar rebeccahill@iinet.net.au says:

    Most interesting picture, Patrick!

    Don’t often see this particular cloud phenomenon seen from 35,000 feet up in a plane. Looking carefully at the photo, it almost looks like the sun is reflecting off of a thin layer of see-through icecap, through which one can see mid-level mackerel-sky patterned Altocumulus cloud, similar to pack-ice on a vast ocean below.

    From Rebecca Hill, Canberra, Australia

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A cloud formation that resembles a DNA double helix is likely a Kelvin-Helmholtz (Fluctus) cloud or a double helix cloud. These formations are not a specific type of cloud, per se, but rather a visual phenomenon resulting from the interaction of air layers moving at different speeds and densities. This results in air flows that tend to have a distinct serpentine motion. This rare sighting was spotted over Auckland, New Zealand.

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Storm development with various shades of grey, accompanied by signs of mammatus (mamma), spotted over Arnhem, Netherlands

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On a hot day, evaporation fog emanates over the Northwest Arm of Halifax Harbour, Halifax, Nova Scotia, Canada

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