View allAll Photos Tagged inversion
Amazing temperature Inversion from Rippon Tor looking towards Haytor & Saddle Tor on Saturday morning :) Shot with a Sony A6000
Better viewed on Vimeo vimeo.com/168457695
Selworthy hill from Exmoor (Porlock Hill) The Inversion was up quite high with the Bristol Channel absolutely full of fog.
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Terry Eve Photography (Including Moira) now available for Weddings, Graduations, Special Occasions, Commercial, and Pet pictures Aberdeen and NE Scotland UK. .
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Surfing an inversion, that stretched northwards from Lake Windermere, F-15E LN3001 hammers north through Dunmail Raise in LFA17
Blea Tarn, Little Langdale this Saturday morning. As I stood and watched in amazement, this surreal cloud inversion rose up from the valley floor at 7.30am and enveloped the Langdale peaks in less than an hour. Unreal, I have never seen anything like this before! 2-stop nd grad (s), polariser with four f/11 photos focus stacked in LrCC
Light sent through and on top of a lens hood. 16mm macro extension tube. Cropped and edited in Fujifilm's raw converter.
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Lough Foyle with a cloud inversion as seen for Benenveagh mountain Northern Ireland, the street lights below lighting up the clouds and the vivid Milky way above. 15-8-2020 @ 01:50
Just after sunrise on Saturday, my first trip out in a while and well worth the early start for this stunner of a morning.
Back at the start of October I managed to grab a weekend away in the Peak District for some photography - while we don't live that far away, its far enough that sunrises and sunsets need a lot of planning and luck! So a couple of night's camping let me get close close to my favourite locations on a weekend that looked promising. The culmination of that weekend was this spectacular cloud inversion in the Hope Valley - conditions that I've never experienced before and was so excited to witness that I almost couldn't focus on the photography! Watching the waves of cloud break over the ridge was just amazing and I will remember this experience for the rest of my life.
This overlook just called for a selfie to showcase the scale of this place. Got super lucky with inversion rolling in just before sunset, creating an incredible show with stunning colors and more atmosphere than you can imagine.
Shenandoah National Park, VA
There have been a lot of cloud inversions so far this Winter in Virginia. Every time I see a dense fog advisory issued, I can't help but grab the camera and head to the higher elevations at SNP :-)
To give you an idea as to how dense this inversion is, there are several mountains and towns buried below the fog ocean.
THANKS FOR VIEWING!
A real gift to get a cloud inversion like this. I wasn't expecting it and as I watched the cloud rolling in I thought it was going to envelop the peak I was camping on.
It did cover the peak I was on at one point so I retired to my tent for a cup of tea, by the time I was half way through it the cloud cleared to give me views like this. Didn't know where to point the camera initially but managed to calm down and think about compositions.
Inversion at that gate on Mam Tor
Tuesday was amazing with a full inversion filling Hope Valley and majority of the Peak District.
For those who follow me on other social media channels will know that this is one of my fave locations in the Peaks, its justifiable with those conditions.
This morning on Baslow Edge, Derbyshire Peak District, to photograph the heather.
Unfortunately, I'd taken completely the wrong lens, so I had to improvise. This is a pano of 15 portrait format shots.
Waited for ages hoping this inversion would spread across the whole bridge. It never did and dissapeared as darkness fell. Still, not something you see everyday!
Our house remained in the mist all Boxing day but a short walk uphill took us into the sunshine - if only for a brief time.
Another very early morning trip up to the Horse Shoe pass. On arrival I was greeted with thick cold mist but decided to head up to the top any way. It was just as thick up the there so I sat down for a breather But after 5 minutes the the fog suddenly dropped to reveal a blood red sun just breaking the horizon I quickly set up my tripod and slapped the camera on top and took a series of images to be stitched together later. I don't think I will ever forget this view !
Cloud fills the Eden Valley. Viewed from the A686, the Hartside road. Looking North along the line of the Pennine foothills.
One of the best things about getting up high is the view one can sometimes get of cloud inversions - fog to most people. This image was captured on a recent trip to Strathcona Provincial Park, which is the wild heart of Vancouver Island.
It's fun to see these mirages in the roadway, where the road appears to zoom up a steep hill ahead, where in reality it is flat as a pancake.
This kind of superior mirage (mirage in which the ground, or something on the ground seems to be high in the air) is caused by a temperature inversion, which we often experience in winter.
From Wikipedia:
"A superior mirage is one in which the mirage image appears to be located above the real object. A superior mirage occurs when the air below the line of sight is colder than the air above it. This unusual arrangement is called a 'temperature inversion' since warm air above cold air is the opposite of the normal temperature gradient of the atmosphere during the daytime.
"Light rays (and your line of sight) passing through the temperature inversion are bent downward, and so the image appears above the true object, hence the name superior.
"Superior mirages tend to be more stable than inferior mirages, as cold air has no tendency to move up and warm air has no tendency to move down."