FLPhotoCatcher wrote: ↑Mon Mar 04, 2024 7:44 pm
This January 20, I noticed ice crystals sparkling in the light of the golf cart I was using to bring hay to our sheep. It was very cold, maybe around 5F. I live in middle Tennessee, and this kind of cold is unusual. I then noticed that, when I looked toward the lightbar on the golf cart, the sparkles were mostly only visible above and below the light. I figured that the ice crystals were the kind usually found in the arctic that can make light pillars. So I grabbed my camera and tripod, and got some photos of the phenomenon.
The reason that there is not a light pillar above the golf cart in the 2nd photo is because the ice crystals came in waves, and there were few ice crystals at that point. Maybe the ice crystals formed from steam coming from our creek. I'm not sure.
The light bar is failing, and parts of it are dimmer, so that's why in the third photo there are vertical stripes seen in the pillar. Orion is visible to the right in the first and third photos, and the Pleiades is visible above the moon in the second photo.
Amazing pictures, especially the first one!
You know what I like best about that picture? Well, the light pillar itself, and the visibly illuminated ice crystals close to it, is number one, of course. Seeing Orion behind it is a great bonus. But "a very close number two" to me is the amazing blue color of Sirius.
Seeing blue color in stars is very hard. Once, a long time ago, I read that blue stars have to be sufficiently bright to induce "a blue response" from our retinas. Your picture, which I take it is relatively "raw" - because surely you didn't spend hours processing it? - shows the same response as the human retina. Only the brightest bluish source, which is of course Sirius, looks blue (but not the much bluer stars of Orion).
In your third picture, Sirius does not look blue. I have no idea why. Anyway, superb pictures!
Ann