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domingo, 5 de julio de 2015

NASA : NASA's Earth Observatory .- Brillantes Nubes de Noche

Hola amigos: A VUELO DE UN QUINDE EL BLOG., la Agencia Espacial NASA, nos hace llegar una hermosa fotografía  de unas brillantes nubes de la noche  en la atmósfera.
NASA, nos dice: "En el final de la primavera y el verano, nubes inusuales forman en la alta  atmósfera por encima de las regiones polares del mundo. Como la atmósfera inferior se calienta, la atmósfera superior se enfría y cristales de hielo se forman en el polvo de meteoritos y otras partículas  en el cielo alto. El resultado es noctilucentes o nubes ", que brilla de noche" (CEN) wisps azules electricos que crecen en el borde del espacio...."
More Infomation....
http://www.nasa.gov/image-feature/night-shining-clouds


Composite image of North Pole showing noctilucent clouds
In the late spring and summer, unusual clouds form high in the atmosphere above the polar regions of the world. As the lower atmosphere warms, the upper atmosphere gets coooler, and ice crystals form on meteor dust and other particles high in the sky. The result is noctilucent or “night-shining” clouds (NLCs)—electric blue wisps that grow on the edge of space.

NASA’s Aeronomy of Ice in the Mesosphere (AIM) spacecraft observed noctilucent clouds on June 10, 2015. This image is a composite of several satellite passes over the Arctic, and the clouds appear in various shades of light blue to white, depending on the density of the ice particles. The instrument measures albedo—how much light is reflected back to space by the high-altitude clouds.
Noctilucent clouds were first described in the mid-19th century after the eruption of the Krakatau volcano. Volcanic ash spread through the atmosphere, making for vivid sunsets around the world and provoking the first known observations of NLCs. At first people thought they were a side-effect of the volcano, but long after Krakatau’s ash settled, the wispy, glowing clouds remained.
In the past decade, AIM has been observing and measuring these seasonal, high-altitude cloud formations. Researchers have found that they are appearing earlier and stretching to lower latitudes with greater frequency. There is some evidence that this is a result of increased greenhouse gases in the atmosphere.
Though they were not thick enough to appear in AIM imagery, some noctilucent clouds were visible to ground-based observers in the continental United States on June 9 and 10.
Image Credit: NASA Earth Observatory map by Joshua Stevens, using Polar Mesospheric Cloud data from the University of Colorado Laboratory for Atmospheric and Space Physics
Caption: Mike Carlowicz
Last Updated: July 5, 2015
Editor: Sarah Loff
Tags:  AIM (Aeronomy of Ice in the Mesosphere), Air, Ice, Image of the Day
 NASA
Guillermo Gonzalo Sánchez Achutegui
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