Nacreous Clouds
Nacreous clouds glow brightly with vivid iridescent colours. They are wave clouds and their undulating sheet-like forms reveal the winds and waves of the stratosphere.
Nacreous means pearlescene or pearl-like. These stunning clouds, sometimes called mother-of-pearl clouds, are observed in the Antarctic each Austral spring and fall when upper air temperatures drop low enough for their formation. Nacreous clouds typically occur in the stratosphere, at heights of between 10 and 30 km, where the temperature falls below -80 degrees C. They’re likely composed of ice particles with a liquid coating of nitric acid tri-hydrate, and they appear bright or luminescent because they’re sufficiently high to be illuminated by the Sun, long after local sunset. At higher latitudes, the Sun is never far from the horizon from late spring through early fall. The pastel colors of nacreous clouds are attributable to the process of diffraction.
Nacreous clouds are often observed along the Antarctic Peninsula where mountains create lee-waves in the upper atmosphere. The conditions that allow them to form may persist for several months. On occasion, they’ve been seen as far equatorward as southern England. Stratospheric clouds are associated with ozone depletion since they provide the necessary environment for the chlorine based catalytic photochemistry that destroys ozone at around 1% per day.

You can also read about another amazing phenomenon called Colours of Aurora in Antarctica
|
Related Posts |


May 28th, 2008 at 2:17 pm
This is to ask you to show the beautiful picture above on my blog.
Is it all right? If the image is copy-righted, mentioning the name of the copyright owner would make it possible for me to show it?
Please let me know. The pictured clouds are the most beautiful and unusual ones that I have ever seen.
Sato
P.S. My blog is just for fun and there is no commercial transactions related to the clouds’ image. S.