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A noctilucent display over the Moskva River, Fili, Moscow, Russia.
2 thoughts on “A noctilucent display over the Moskva River, Fili, Moscow, Russia.”
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Crepuscular rays over San Luis Taxhimay Dam, Mexico
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Cumulus congestus spotted over Modbury Heights, Adelaide, South Australia, Australia
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Virga spotted over Hochsauerlandkreis, North Rhine-Westphalia, Germany
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Sunrise over Vermontville, Adirondacks, New York, US
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A view of low lying stratus in the valley, spotted by Bill's friend, Bill Buffie, from a funicular while traveling in Switzerland
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A mixed sky on a wintry afternoon near Cheddar Reservoir, Somerset, England
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Fluctus (Kelvin-Helmholtz) spotted over Isle of Harris, Scotland
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A fraction of a Circumzenithal Arc, with its 'upside-down' rainbow colours, visible via the confines of this cirrus cloud, spotted over Bayramiç, Çanakkale, Turkey
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Cumulus congestus taking on a look of a chick being hatched, spotted over Warsaw, Poland
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Altocumulus lenticularis spotted over Western Iran
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Reflections of the sky over Sacramento, California, US
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Fog along the Bieszczady Mountains, Poland
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Snow showers falling on Isle of Harris, Scotland
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Overcast near Ellesmere Port, Cheshire, England
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Sunset over Vermontville, Adirondacks, New York, US
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super composition Dmitry!
congratulations
Very nice picture, Dmitry!
A calm and serene view at sunset of Fili District, Moscow across the other side of the reflective, glass-like Moscow River on a cold, fine mid-winter’s evening in mid-February. The amazing, high-atmospheric, cold noctilucent clouds in the sky almost create an icy bridge linking one side of the Moscow to the other. Living in Canberra, Australia in the southern hemisphere at 35 degrees south latitude and 580m above sea level, I don’t see this particular cloud type very much, as the climatic conditions there aren’t right, even though we often do get fairly cold, dry winters with calm, clear, cold dark nights, followed by frosty mornings. Summers can be really hot and dry. From what I have seen in other cloud society member’s photos of noctilucent clouds in the past, it seems to appear in the much colder northern regions of the northern hemisphere such as Russia, Scandanavia, Canada, Alaska, Northern Scotland and Iceland where the climate conditions there are more favourable. Rebecca Hill, Canberra, Australia