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SOLAR MINIMUM:
The sun is in the pits of a very deep solar minimum. Many
researchers thought the sunspot cycle had hit bottom in 2008
when the sun was blank 73% of the time. Not so. 2009 is on
the verge of going even lower. So far this year, the sun has
been blank 75% of the time, and only a serious outbreak of
sunspots over the next few weeks will prevent 2009 from becoming
the quietest year in a century. Solar minimum continues.
LONG NIGHT'S MOON:
Last night, observers around the world enjoyed
the bright light of the full "Long Night's Moon."
In the Netherlands, the moonlight revealed a bunch of frosty
kiwis hanging in the back garden of photographer Jacob Kuiper:

"November of 2009 was the 2nd warmest November since
1901,"
says Kuiper. "Because of this spring-like weather, my
kiwifruit was still hanging in place when December brought
our first frost--and a lovely full Moon."
The question is, will they still be hanging when the second
full Moon of December arrives? This month has two full Moons--the
Long Night's Moon of Dec. 1st-2nd and a rare "Blue Moon"
on Dec. 31st. Check back then for updates, and meanwhile browse
the links below.
more images: from
Mark Riddick of Staunton, Virginia; from
Stefano De Rosa of Turin, Italy; from
Mike Deep of San Antonio, TX; from
Derek Weston of Iowa City, IA; from
Rick Ellis of Toronto, Canada; from
John C McConnell of Maghaberry Northern Ireland; from
P-M Hedén of Vallentuna, Sweden; from
Enrico Finotto of Health of Livenza, Venice, Italy; from
Doug Zubenel of Lenexa, Kansas; from
Steve Cotthaus of Virginia Beach, VA; from
Alexandros Diamantis of Athens, Greece;
RARE MOON HALOS:
On Nov. 29th, when the waxing Moon ascended over Kittilä,
Finland, Timo
Veijalainen walked outside and witnessed a once-in-a-lifetime
moonrise. "I saw this weird halo," he says. "It
didn't start out so bright, but later it intensified and formed
a number of different rings. I've never seen anything it!"
Fortunately, he was not too spellbound to take a picture:

The display was caused by ice crystals floating in the air
between Finland and the Moon. Moonlight glinted, reflected,
and refracted through the crystals in a complicated
pattern that produced a display of surpassing beauty.
Atmospheric optics expert Les Cowley was so impressed, he
waxed poetic in describing the scene: "Halos like this
around Helios, the ancient Greek sun god, would be notable.
Around much fainter Selene, the moon goddess, they are outstanding.
We need new names for some of them. On each side of Selene
there is a bright and colorful moondog or 'paraselene.'
The white halo joining them and passing through the moon is
a 'paraselenic
circle.'"
"But the two choicest gems illuminated by Selene keep
their old names. The very topmost halo is a rare one. It remains
a Parry arc
in honor of its discoverer the Arctic explorer William
Parry, who first saw it around the sun. That's not all.
The smudges near the moondogs are very rare lower and middle
Lowitz
arcs. These were not even photographed around Helios until
the 1990s!"
November
Northern Lights Gallery
[previous Novembers: 2008,
2007, 2006,
2004, 2003,
2002, 2001]
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