9 September 2022
It looks like a spaceship but it’s actually a cloud.
Here’s another one at Palm Desert, California.
And another one — quite ominous! — in the mountains in Patagonia. Do I see a mouth on this cloud?
These are all lenticular clouds which form when the wind blows horizontally toward a fixed object that forces the air to rise and fall in a wave. If the fixed object is a mountain and the air is moist it forms a cloud on top of the mountain. The cloud stays right there, thumb-tacked to the sky, as shown in this time lapse from Mount Teide in the Canary Islands.
Mesmerizing timelapse of a lenticular cloud hovering over Mount Teide in the Canary Islands as day turns to night, captured by photographer Bartosz Wojczy?ski.pic.twitter.com/1eLRYGWWsu
— Wonder of Science (@wonderofscience) July 20, 2022
(photos from Wikimedia Commons; click on the captions to see the originals)
Isn’t Mother Nature amazing? Thanks for making us aware of this phenomenon. Enjoy your blog and am always learning new things from your posts.
Have a spectacular weekend!