Anticrepuscular Rays Over Florida
			
		
		
			Credit & Copyright:  
Daniel Herron
		
		
			What's happening over the horizon?  
Although the scene may appear somehow 
supernatural, 
nothing more unusual is occurring than a 
setting Sun and some well placed clouds.  
Strangely, the actual sunset was occurring in the opposite direction from where the camera was pointing. 
Pictured above are 
anticrepuscular rays.  
To understand them, start by picturing common 
crepuscular rays that are seen any time that sunlight pours though scattered clouds. 
Now although sunlight indeed travels along 
straight lines, the projections of these lines onto the 
spherical sky are 
great circles.  
Therefore, the 
crepuscular rays from a 
setting (or rising) sun 
will appear to re-converge on the other side of the sky.  
At the anti-solar point 180 degrees around from the 
Sun, they are referred to as 
anticrepuscular rays.
While enjoying the sunset after visiting NASA's 
Kennedy Space Center in 
Florida,  
the photographer chanced to find that an even 
more spectacular sight was occurring in the other direction just over the 
Atlantic Ocean -- a particularly vivid set of 
anticrepuscular rays.