Âé¶¹ÒùÔº


Sun dogs, rainbows and glories are celestial wonders, and they may appear in alien skies too

sun dogs
Credit: Unsplash/CC0 Public Domain

Every once in a while, you may look up toward the sun and see strange bright lights on either side of it. Or perhaps you'll be sitting in an aircraft, looking out the window at its shadow, and see a circle of light, like a halo below (known as ). Or, if you're really adventurous, maybe you'll even be out on a midnight walk with a full moon lighting your way, and see what appears to be a rainbow encircling the moon.

These are all beautiful examples of atmospheric optical phenomena. And a has suggested they may appear in alien skies too.

These celestial wonders can tell us a lot about the state of the atmosphere at home on Earth as well as on other planets. , for instance, the most well-known of these phenomena, can only form when light passes through spherical liquid droplets, like our normal rain on Earth. Therefore, there must be spherical liquid droplets in the atmosphere where the rainbows are observed.

Most planet atmospheres have some kind of crystalline aerosols (clouds of tiny particles) in them, from (one of Jupiter's moons), to . On Earth, these are generally , often found in clouds as snowflakes. The orientation of these crystals, and how they change the light, dictates the type of optical phenomena you can see.

are another of these phenomena, where appear on either side of the sun, sometimes even splitting white light into the colors of the rainbow. They form because of the light being bent by horizontally oriented hexagonal ice crystals high up in the atmosphere. If you want the best chance of seeing these, you should try to be at the same latitudes as Europe or Argentina during wintertime. Look for high altitude wispy clouds that are in front of the sun, and you might get lucky.

Horizontal ice crystals can also create in extremely cold conditions, which look like colored beams of light trailing to clouds overhead. Vertical crystals form —a circle of light at the same height as the sun. And crystals aligned with the electric fields create .

The new paper proposes that from what we know of our own atmosphere, we can presume that similar optical phenomena happen on planets outside of our solar system (called exoplanets). It's just a matter of spotting them and finding out why they occur.

Previous studies have shown that on many exoplanets the crystalline aerosols in their atmospheres are moved around and oriented in a multitude of , much like on Earth.

swirl around the planet, as they do on Earth, pushing and pulling along field lines. On Earth, this can be seen as the northern lights phenomenon. Radiation pressure from a planet's parent star pushes the crystals using the power of light, much like how the wind pushes boats. And the wind, often much faster than anywhere on Earth, speeds around the exoplanet, rushing from the hot, star-facing side of the exoplanet to the colder space-facing side as the planet spins.

A special type of exoplanet, (so named because they're huge, gassy and very hot) generally have incredibly fast winds (up to ) and high densities of crystalline aerosols, much like an incredibly fast-moving sandstorm.

This means that the main way that the crystals are oriented is through the superfast winds spinning around the planet. Imagine a fleet of boats all randomly turned around in a patch of ocean, then a massive gust of wind comes, turning them all so that they're facing the same direction.

The researchers on the new paper previously used the James Webb Space Telescope (JWST) to find evidence of tiny quartz crystals in the clouds of a hot Jupiter 1,300 light years away from Earth (WASP-17 b). These crystals have an elongated shape, like boats, so are more likely to be oriented with the wind. This led them to think about what could be seen with the wind-aligned crystals.

The optical phenomena that come from the crystals being oriented the same way cannot be seen by normal cameras. But scientists can use instruments such as those on the JWST to observe these effects.

We have already gained valuable information about faraway atmospheres from looking at their optical phenomena using the JWST. For example, on Venus, and have been used by scientists to decipher the mysteries of Venus's extreme heat and yellow color.

A similar technique of observing glories has been used to detect the presence of long-lasting clouds on the exoplanet . The new knowledge of these clouds gives us insight into the exoplanet's atmosphere. Now we know that there can be conditions for a stable temperature, which surprised scientists, as half of the planet is hot enough to melt iron.

We can also guess what optical effects might occur on planets where we know what the is made of. For example, in the high atmospheres of Jupiter and Saturn, where a special type of ammonia crystals are concentrated, we would expect to observe sun dogs. Alas, on Earth, we can only ever see two at a time due to the shape of our atmospheric ice crystals.

Who knows what other wondrous phenomena we may see on other worlds? Who's to say whether there couldn't be a planet surrounded by continual rainbows? There is much more to learn about so many exoplanets. Optical such as sun dogs can tell us huge amounts about their atmospheres, which could help us in the search for habitable planets in the future.

Provided by The Conversation

This article is republished from under a Creative Commons license. Read the .The Conversation

Citation: Sun dogs, rainbows and glories are celestial wonders, and they may appear in alien skies too (2025, August 28) retrieved 13 September 2025 from /news/2025-08-sun-dogs-rainbows-glories-celestial.html
This document is subject to copyright. Apart from any fair dealing for the purpose of private study or research, no part may be reproduced without the written permission. The content is provided for information purposes only.

Explore further

Sun dogs and other celestial effects could appear in alien skies

0 shares

Feedback to editors