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:
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Shi Shi Beach, Olympic National Park, Washington
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Greetings from Asbury Park
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Sequential images of a total solar eclipse
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Penguin Awareness Day
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Happy New Year! (Again!)
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Happy World Whale Day!
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Wild lupines
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Siblings Day
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Antarctica Day
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National Cherry Blossom Festival
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Thomas Jefferson Memorial, Washington, DC
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Longer days mean warmer sand
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National Audubon Society s Christmas Bird Count
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It s National Camera Day. Get the picture?
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Class, please take out a No. 2 pencil…
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Blue linckia sea stars in Papua New Guinea
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Waiting for winter
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Aerial view of a heart-shaped field in Trittau, Germany
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Float on
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In memory of those lost
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Sand, sun, and sk8ers
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A traboule in Lyon, France
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How Quảng Ngãi got its grove back
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World Art Day
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Bald cypress trees in Georgia
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Time for brass bands and beer
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Celebrating Pi Day
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Oloupena Falls, island of Molokai, Hawaii
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Oymyakon, Russia
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Little Pigeon River, Great Smoky Mountains, Tennessee
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