Skywatchers across the country enjoying outburst of rarely seen 'jaw-dropping' clouds - Action News
Home WebMail Saturday, November 23, 2024, 10:52 AM | Calgary | -12.0°C | Regions Advertise Login | Our platform is in maintenance mode. Some URLs may not be available. |
Science

Skywatchers across the country enjoying outburst of rarely seen 'jaw-dropping' clouds

If you've happened to glance up at the sky about an hour after sunset or an hour before sunrise and noticed wispy, electric blue clouds on the horizon, you've managed to catch a rare sighting of noctilucent clouds.

Noctilucent clouds putting on a show stretching south all the way to California

Amateur astronomer Alan Dyer saw this beautiful display of noctilucent clouds on the evening of June 17, near Calgary. These rare clouds have been quite active this year, experts and skywatchers say. (Alan Dyer/AmazingSky.com)

If you've happened to glance up at the sky about an hour after sunset or an hour before sunrise and noticed wispy, electric blue clouds on the horizon, you've managed to catch a rare sighting of noctilucent clouds, or NLCs.

Over the past few weeks, NLCs, also known as polar mesospheric clouds, have been spotted not just in northern regions, but in areas that have never had reported sightingsbefore, including as far south as California.

"We're seeing more [NLCs]this year than any other time," said James Russell, principal investigator for NASA's Aeronomy of Ice in the Mesosphere (AIM) satellitethat studies NLCs. "In fact, we've seen them at the lowest latitudes on record."

NLCs are the highest clouds in our atmosphere, at an altitude of roughly 80 kilometres.

While NLCs still aren't completely understood, researchers know that three things need to be present in order for them to form: an increase in water vapour, very cold temperatures and particles on which the water vapour can freeze.

The sun must also be at least six degrees below the horizon to illuminate the clouds.

The first recorded sighting of NLCswas in 1885, two years after theviolent eruption of the Krakatoa volcano in Indonesia. At the time, many scientistsbelieved that the two events were somehow linked. However, NLCs have continued to appear at the poles year after year.

Now scientists believe that perhaps dust from meteroid particles tiny bits of space dust present in our atmosphere could be the particles on which ice crystals form once the water vapour freezes.

But why are NLC sightings on the rise?

Laura Duchesne captured a display of noctilucent clouds from Windsor, Ont., on June 11. (Laura Duchesne)

Scientists believe that what's changed is an increase in water vapour in the upper atmosphere.

"We know there is more water inlower latitudes than ever before in the time period we've been observing, over the last 12 years," Russell said.

While water vapour can act as a blanket, warming the Earth below, up in the higher atmosphere, closer to the coldness of space, the atmosphere radiates heat outward and cools.

And that might account for NLC sightings so far south.

There is also another factor that might be contributing to the phenomenon.

The sun goes through a cycle every 11 years, going from a period of high activity, with more sunspots and flares, for example, to one of lower activity. Even at its maximum, the sun hasn't been quite as active over the past few cycles and, at the moment, we're heading into the peak of lower activity, called a solar minimum.

When the sun isn't as active, it can cause the mesosphere, a region in our upper atmosphere, to cool down even more. Russell said there's a theory that perhaps the cooler temperatures and increased water vapour might be behind the increase in NLC activity.

Chasing clouds

No matter the reason behind the NLCs, people are enjoying the show.

Mike Noble, who is fortunate to live in Edmonton, where these displays are more easily seen, has been chasing them since 2012. Hehas spotted NLCs on more than 250 different nights 50 of those in 2018 alone.

NLCs are typically spotted in the northern hemisphere between late May and August. Noblefirst spotted them this season on May 25, beating his previous early record of May 28 last year.

"The activity of noctilucent cloudsthis year has been much more," Noble said.

Noctilucent clouds are seen over Halifax on the night of June 12. (Michael Boschat)

On some nights, Noble said, the initial presence of NLCs starts with almost a whisper a slight glow against the evening twilight sky. Whereas other nights, "it can explode and it can get so bright."

Alister Ling, a retired meteorologist who also hailsfrom Edmontonand is an NLC chaser, says he hopes one day to create a model that can forecast when NLCs might occur something that's never been done successfully.

"Nothing of interest happens that high [in the atmosphere] that affects the day-to-day life for airplanes or people, so weather models don't have the need to go up that high."

For now, he is enjoying the incredibledisplays.

"One of the things that I love about observing noctilucent clouds with binocularsis a nice display that is jaw-dropping," he said. "The level of detail, the waves."

If you want to see them for yourself, look north about an hour after sunset or an hour before sunrise, and be sure you have a good view of the northern horizon.

While it can't be said for certain how long this particular outburst will last, Noble encourages people to enjoy the night sky.

"I want people to get out of their beds and look up," he said. "There are things to see at night."