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Saturday, January 29, 2011

Amazing Light Pillars Rain Down On Nebraska Farm

Astro Physics - coupmedia.org: "Light pillars are a common sight around cities in winter. Urban lights bounce off ice crystals in the air, producing tall luminous columns sometimes mistaken for auroras. But the light pillars Mike Hollingshead saw last night near a corn mill in Nebraska were decidely uncommon. 'They had V-shaped tops,' he explains, 'and some of the Vs were nested.' Here is what he saw:

'These light pillars are not just rare, they are exceptional!' declares atmospheric optics expert Les Cowley. 'Ordinary pillars are produced by plate-shaped ice crystals roughly half way between you and the light source. These are different. Their rarely seen flared tops show that they were made by column-shaped crystals drifting slowly downwards and aligned horizontal by air resistance.' "

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