Decoding the Sky: Actionable Strategies for Observing Rare Atmospheric Events
You've watched storms roll in from miles away, caught the green flash at sunset, and maybe even documented a sprite or two. But rare atmospheric event...
11 articles in this category
You've watched storms roll in from miles away, caught the green flash at sunset, and maybe even documented a sprite or two. But rare atmospheric event...
For anyone who has ever looked up and seen a ring around the moon or a flash of green at sunset, the question is immediate: how did that happen? Atmos...
Atmospheric phenomena are more than pretty postcards. For professionals working in fields like aviation, renewable energy, outdoor event management, o...
For the observer who has moved past identifying a basic rainbow, the sky offers subtler and more structured phenomena. Halos, sundogs, light pillars, ...
For anyone who spends serious time reading the sky—whether for photography, aviation, storm chasing, or pure curiosity—the difference between a harmle...
If you work with weather-dependent operations, aviation, renewable energy siting, or outdoor event planning, you've likely stared at the sky and wishe...
For anyone who has spent time watching the sky—whether from a mountain ridge, a coastal cliff, or a suburban backyard—there comes a moment when a halo...
You have probably seen a sundog or a circumzenithal arc and wondered not just what it is called, but why it forms at that exact angle, why the colors ...
For those who have already memorized the rainbow's order and can spot a 22° halo on command, the sky still holds layers of subtlety that reward a clos...
Have you ever looked up at the sky and noticed a bright ring around the sun, a pair of glowing spots on either side of it, or a vertical column of lig...
You have seen the photos: ghostly, electric-blue ribbons snaking across a twilight sky, glowing long after the sun has set. These are noctilucent clou...