When the sky is clear, and the moon hangs low in the horizon, you can sometimes spot a halo around it, like the one captured in this image from Hug Point Falls on the Oregon coast. And occasionally within that halo, you may also see a bright spot that appears to be a second moon. No, it"s not the moon"s long-lost twin, but an optical phenomenon called a paraselene, more commonly referred to as a moon dog or mock moon. This "false" moon can appear when the real moon is at least a quarter visible and is bright enough for its light to refract off hexagonal plate-shaped ice crystals floating in the atmosphere. Moon dogs are more commonly seen in winter months, when ice crystals are more prevalent in the clouds.
What s going on in this sky?
Today in History
More Desktop Wallpapers:
-
Get amped for Glastonbury
-
You ve never seen anything like this
-
Christmas lights in Domaso, Lake Como, Italy
-
Mount Fuji Day
-
Daiichi Tadami River Bridge, Fukushima, Japan
-
Happy World Photography Day!
-
Venice Skatepark, Los Angeles, California
-
Noctilucent clouds
-
Gone ‘lightseeing’ in Berlin
-
Red lechwe, Okavango Delta, Botswana
-
Mountain mists over Bavaria
-
Vote!
-
Festival of British Archaeology
-
Mont-Saint-Michel
-
A theatrical dream
-
Muskoxen in Dovre-Sunndalsfjella National Park, Norway
-
Arbor Day
-
International Sloth Day
-
Reflections of the night sky
-
Celebrating World Wildlife Day
-
Chapada dos Veadeiros National Park shines
-
Mediterranean red sea stars
-
Lake Tekapo, New Zealand
-
Happy anniversary to the National Park Service!
-
Killer whales in Spildra, Norway
-
World Architecture Day
-
Gulf Islands National Seashore, Florida
-
Castle ruins on the island of Halki, Greece
-
A hint of spring
-
A stunning national park in winter white
Bing Wallpaper Gallery

