A Guide to Rare Nacreous Clouds (Polar Stratospheric clouds)
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Shimmering Mother of Pearl Clouds
Nacreous clouds are also known as polar stratospheric clouds (PSCs), and can be seen in the polar countries of the northern and southern hemisphere. These rare and beautiful clouds shimmer with colours you find in a seashell, hence their nickname "mother of pearl clouds".
Despite their beauty, the increasing frequency of nacreous clouds is worrying for scientists. You wouldn't think of such a delicate pretty looking cloud as being destructive, but that's exactly what the mother of pearl cloud is - they are helping to destroy our ozone layer.
Facts About Nacreous Clouds
How a polar stratospheric cloud is formed
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Nacreous clouds form in the Stratosphere, between 10 and 30 miles up. The weather clouds we see everyday form in troposphere, with cirrus clouds being the highest at about 6 miles up. The next layer in our atmosphere is the stratosphere, which is separated from the troposphere by the tropopause.
The stratosphere is very different to the troposphere; it is made up of thin dry air in stable conditions. Also in contrast to the troposphere, the temperature rises from the bottom to the top in the stratosphere, which is caused by the absorption of heat from the ozone layer. -
Nacreous clouds seen in the polar regions of the Northern and Southern hemispheres, at latitudes of 50 degrees or more.
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Nacreous clouds are wave clouds, and are a cousin to the lenticular clouds that form over mountains. The stratosphere is very dry and it is rare for moisture to find it's way into this layer of the atmosphere. The ice crysals that form nacreous clouds are pushed up into the stratosphere by wave winds that are so strong they oscillate up through the trophosphere and into the stratosphere layer above.
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Polar stratospheric clouds are made up of miniscule ice crystals, forming at around -85 degrees Celsius (-124 degrees Fahrenheit) Very cold indeed! They are typically seen in the winter months as the sun sets or rises and are illuminated by the suns rays from below the horizon.
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The iridescent colours of nacreous clouds is due to the ice crystals being of a uniform shape and size and the cloud cover being thin. The sun has to be at just the right angle below the horizon to cause differaction and interference with the crystals to produce these beautiful colours.
The Trophosphere and Stratosphere with Nacreous Cloud. Source: NASA images.
A Quick Guide to the Ozone Layer
Nacreous clouds affect the ozone layer
What is the ozone layer? It is a delicate layer of oxygen formed naturally at about 20-30 miles (32 to 48 km) high in the stratosphere. It protects life on this planet from harmful ultraviolet light; over exposure to UV rays can lead to skin cancer for humans but would also cause other damaging affects to plants and animals. The ozone layer has been depleting in the Polar Regions (especially in the Antarctic) at about 4% a decade since it was first recorded in the 1970s.
Our modern lifestyle produces CFCs (chlorofluorocarbons), which are found in aerosols, fridges, solvents and much more besides. When CFCs are released into the atmosphere, they make their way up through to the stratosphere where they are converted by the sun's UV rays into chlorine compounds that in turn react with the ozone molecules leading to the depletion of the ozone layer.
2006 Ozone hole over Antarctica. Credit: NASA
This is a shocking image, taken in 2006 by NASA, it shows the ozone hole to be 10.6 million square miles (27.5 million square kilometres). Read more about it here: NASA and NOAA Announce Ozone Hole is a Double Record Breaker
How Nacreous Clouds Affect the Ozone Layer
Beautiful but destructive clouds
Polar stratospheric clouds provide a surface for the chlorine and bromine in the CFC's to react into an active form, even if the forms of chlorine compounds are benign. This reaction makes the chlorine become destructive to the ozone layer. Simultaneously the ice crystals also remove nitrogen which helps slow and moderate the damaging chlorine and bromine.
Nacreous clouds help accelerate the process of the depletion of the ozone layer, without the clouds there is little or no damage.
Polar Stratospheric Clouds in the municipality of Asker, Norway. By Sondrekv, on Wikimedia
Breathtaking Videos of Polar Stratospheric Clouds
Time-lapse footage of nacreous clouds
A Fantastic Book About Clouds
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Nacreous Clouds Making News
- Sulfate injections may not save the arctic
- ... sheets or loss of polar bear habitat?in the polar regions. (Credit: risteski goce / Shutterstock) U. WASHINGTON (US) ? New research shows that injecting sulfate particles into the stratosphere could be a dangerous attempt to fix climate warming.
- Ozone holes
- That allows for the formation of polar stratospheric clouds, where ozone-depleting chemicals accumulate. When the sun returns in the spring, those chemicals react with ultraviolet rays, destroying ozone on a massive scale.
- Injecting Sulfate Particles into the Stratosphere Won't Save Us from Climate ...
- New University of Washington research demonstrates that one suggested method, injecting sulfate particles into the stratosphere, would likely achieve only part of the desired effect, and could carry serious, if unintended, consequences. A polar bear ...
- NASA Science Aircraft to Travel the Globe in 2012
- IceBridge, a six-year NASA mission, is the largest airborne survey of Earth's polar ice. Data collected during IceBridge will help scientists bridge the gap in polar ice observations between NASA's Ice, Cloud and Land Elevation Satellite (ICESat) and ...
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What Do You Think About Nacreous Clouds?
Photograph by: Ken Klassy, National Science Foundation.
Courtesy of United States Antarctica Program
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coolgrey
Nov 7, 2011 @ 10:03 am | delete
- Interesting and informative backed up by beautiful photography. I love your site. Cheers!
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DavidDove Sep 1, 2011 @ 2:24 am | delete
- other-worldly, thank you
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Papier Aug 11, 2011 @ 5:12 pm | delete
- stunning and scary
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spa-products
Apr 22, 2011 @ 3:36 pm | delete
- Wish they were good for the environment cause they are quite beautiful
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Tipi
Apr 19, 2011 @ 10:16 pm | delete
- How sad to learn that the beautiful Nacreous clouds are harmful to the ozone layer. Still, they are amazing!
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by LKW31
I would love to see a nacreous cloud, but at the same time I sort of don't want to because of their link to the depletion of the ozone. They are stunn... more »
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