Tag: sky/celestial

11 words tagged "sky/celestial"

zenith
The point in the sky directly above you. Your zenith is yours alone — no two people standing in different places share the same one. The opposite is nadir.
water sky
A dark patch on the underside of cloud cover that indicates open water below, visible from a distance across ice. Arctic navigators read the sky as a map of the surface — water sky is dark; ice blink, its opposite, is bright. The clouds become a mirror, and the navigator reads the reflection.
scintillation
The twinkling of stars, caused by light refracting through turbulent, moisture-laden atmosphere. Stars that twinkle more than usual are forecasting incoming weather — more moisture aloft means more refraction. Pacific Island navigators read the sky this way, noting which part of the horizon twinkled most to predict where weather was arriving.
nadir
The point directly below you, opposite the zenith — through the earth and out the other side. In common use it means the lowest point of anything. The Arabic astronomers who named it were mapping the geometry of the sky, and the lowest point was the one you couldn't see.
fallstreak hole
A circular or elliptical gap in a cloud layer where supercooled water droplets have frozen into ice crystals and fallen out, leaving a hole fringed with wispy cirrus. Eerie, geometric, and often mistaken for something stranger than it is.
distrail
The inverse of a contrail: a thin line of blue sky punched through an existing cloud layer by an aircraft's heat. Sometimes called a hole punch when the plane climbs through at an angle. The cloud erased rather than created.
cloud street
Parallel rows of cumulus clouds aligned with the wind, marking alternating bands of rising warm air and sinking cool air. The spacing between streets is usually two to three times the cloud height. The atmosphere organizing itself into lanes.
contrail
A condensation trail left by aircraft exhaust freezing in cold upper air. A persistent contrail means humid air aloft and possibly approaching weather; a vanishing one means dry air. The sky's simplest hygrometer.
averted vision
The technique of looking slightly away from a faint star or object to see it more clearly, placing its image on the more sensitive rod cells at the edge of the retina rather than the less sensitive cone cells at the center. You see the faintest things in the sky by not looking directly at them. The peripheral is more honest than the focal.
Belt of Venus
A pink-purple band of light visible just above Earth's shadow on the opposite horizon at dusk or dawn. The shadow rises blue-gray; the Belt glows above it where sunlight still reaches the upper atmosphere. Best seen from coastal slopes with a low, clear horizon.