ID | #1657699841 |
Added | Wed, 13/07/2022 |
Author | July N. |
Sources | |
Phenomena | |
Status | Result
|
Resume |
Initial data
A clear light source was noticed in the sky by an eyewitness from Sluiskil (Zealand). He described it like this:
A clear light source, as if a second small sun shines through a veil of clouds. Having said that the necessary chemical traces were in place, it could be another refraction of sunlight in a chemical cloud. However, I've never seen anything like it.
According to ufomeldpunt.nl this is a false sun.
Original news
Duidelijke lichtbron alsof er een tweede kleine zon door de sluier bewolking hee
SLUISKIL, ZL — Duidelijke bron van licht alsof er een tweede kleine zon door de sluier bewolking heen schijnt. Gezegd hebbende dat er de nodige chemtrails aanwezig waren zou het nog een breking van licht van de zon op de chemische wolk kunnen zijn. Echter heb nog nooit zoiets waar genomen.
Meest waarschijnlijke verklaring
Bijzon / Bijmaan
Hypotheses
Halo
Halo usually appears around the Sun or moon, sometimes around other powerful light sources such as street lights. There are many types of halos, but they are mostly caused by ice crystals in Cirrus clouds at a height of 5-10 km in the upper troposphere. The form of the observed halo depends on the shape and arrangement of crystals. Reflected and refracted by the ice crystals, the light often turns into a spectrum, which makes halo look like a rainbow, but a halo in low light has a low chroma, which is associated with the peculiarities of twilight vision.
Events
Rocket launches (from space.skyrocket.de)
- Site: Xichang Space Center (Songlin), Sichuan (China) Vehicle: CZ-3B/G3 Payload: Tianlian-2 03 (TL 2C)
Investigation
Based on the appearance, it really is a halo. When the sun is low, sunlight is reflected and refracted by ice crystals (they must reflect sunlight at a certain position at an altitude of 6000 meters), a false sun is formed. There may be two of them (on different sides of the present), but usually only one sunspot is visible.
Resume
Halo
Halo usually appears around the Sun or moon, sometimes around other powerful light sources such as street lights. There are many types of halos, but they are mostly caused by ice crystals in Cirrus clouds at a height of 5-10 km in the upper troposphere. The form of the observed halo depends on the shape and arrangement of crystals. Reflected and refracted by the ice crystals, the light often turns into a spectrum, which makes halo look like a rainbow, but a halo in low light has a low chroma, which is associated with the peculiarities of twilight vision.
Similar facts
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