Sundog
This sundog was obsevered while driving west of Greybull Wyoming on US310 near Little Dry Creek. A sundog is a concentrated patch of sunlight occasionally seen about 22° to the left or right or both sides of the Sun. Sundogs form when sunlight refracts through icy clouds containing hexagonal platecrystals aligned with their large, flat faces parallel to the ground. Technically known as parhelia (singular parhelion) they are often white but sometimes quite colorful, , with red on the inside, toward the Sun, and blue on the outside. Sundogs, like this one, can look like a detached pieces of rainbow.
Reference:
skyandtelescope.org/astronomy-resources/astronomy-questio...
Sundog
This sundog was obsevered while driving west of Greybull Wyoming on US310 near Little Dry Creek. A sundog is a concentrated patch of sunlight occasionally seen about 22° to the left or right or both sides of the Sun. Sundogs form when sunlight refracts through icy clouds containing hexagonal platecrystals aligned with their large, flat faces parallel to the ground. Technically known as parhelia (singular parhelion) they are often white but sometimes quite colorful, , with red on the inside, toward the Sun, and blue on the outside. Sundogs, like this one, can look like a detached pieces of rainbow.
Reference:
skyandtelescope.org/astronomy-resources/astronomy-questio...