Light Pillars over Alaska
Image Credit & Copyright:
Allisha Libby
What's happening behind those houses?
Pictured here are not
auroras but nearby
light pillars,
a nearby phenomenon that can appear as a distant one.
In most places on
Earth, a lucky viewer can see a
Sun-pillar, a column of light
appearing to extend up from the
Sun caused by flat fluttering
ice-crystals reflecting sunlight from the
upper atmosphere.
Usually these
ice crystals
evaporate before reaching the ground.
During freezing temperatures, however,
flat fluttering ice crystals may form near the
ground in a form of light snow,
sometimes known as a crystal fog.
These ice crystals may then reflect ground lights
in columns not unlike a
Sun-pillar.
The featured image was taken in
Fort
Wainwright near
Fairbanks in central
Alaska.