Tag: airglow

  • Glowing Skies

    Glowing Skies

    Not every experiment turns out as expected. Photographer Julien Looten expected to capture the Milky Way arching across the sky above this French chateau. But the photo’s most striking feature is instead the airglow suffusing the sky. The psychedelic colors result from air high in Earth’s atmosphere getting excited by sunlight and producing a faint glow of its own. Such airglow is common, though not always easily seen. If you watch videos from the ISS, you may notice the orange arc of airglow over the atmosphere. (Image credit: J. Looten; via APOD)

  • Rippling Airglow

    Rippling Airglow

    Though we rarely notice it, our sky is always aglow. Washed in solar radiation, the oxygen and nitrogen molecules at high altitude get broken apart during the daytime and recombine at night, producing a luminescent glow that forms a uniform backdrop against the sky. In this image, the airglow forms a bull’s-eye-like set of rings, thanks to atmospheric gravity waves left behind by a thunderstorm. (Image credit: J. Dai; via APOD)