Une aurore Phoenix au-dessus de l'Islande
Image Credit & Copyright:
Hallgrimur P. Helgason;
Rollover Annotation: Judy Schmidt
All of the other aurora watchers had gone home.
By 3:30 am in
Iceland,
on a quiet September night, much of that night's auroras had died down.
Suddenly, unexpectedly, a new burst of particles streamed down from space, lighting up the
Earth's atmosphere once again.
This time, surprisingly,
pareidoliacally,
the night lit up with an
amazing
shape reminiscent of a giant
phoenix.
With camera equipment at the ready, two quick sky images were taken,
followed immediately by a third of the land.
The mountain in the background is
Helgafell,
while the small foreground river is called Kaldá,
both located about 30 kilometers north of Iceland's capital
Reykjavík.
Seasoned skywatchers
will note that just above the mountain, toward the left, is the
constellation of Orion, while the
Pleiades
star cluster is also visible just above the frame center.
The 2016 aurora,
which lasted only a minute and was soon gone forever --
would possibly be dismissed as an
fanciful fable -- were it not captured in the
featured, digitally-composed, image mosaic.