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    Extrem schnelle Wolke (ca. 1.000 km/h ?)

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    • G
      Gerd.RBD | Premium
      last edited by

      Extrem schnelle Wolke?

      Zwischen 5 und 6 Uhr bildet sich die Wolke südlich von Indien, die dann mit hoher Geschwindigkeit nach Afrika zieht. Dort löst sie sich um ca. 11 Uhr auf.
      Das sind ca. 5.000 km in 5 Stunden!

      Kann mir das jemand erklären?

      Oder hat eine Idee, was das ist.

      20230407 - 0612 - Indischer Ozean.jpg

      20230407 - 0730 - Indischer Ozean.jpg

      20230407 - 1000 - Indischer Ozean.jpg

      idefix37I 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
      • idefix37I
        idefix37 Sailor Moderator @Gerd.RBD
        last edited by idefix37

        @Gerd-RBD

        Very strange indeed. I don’t think it is not a real cloud, probably an artefact but not easy to explain because it appears on 2 different satellites zones. Usually at the equinox time when the sun is vertical to the earth equator we see the reflection of the sun on the sea (geostationary satellites being in the earth equator plan). But right now we see this cloud picture…
        https://community.windy.com/topic/11608/reflection-of-the-sun-on-satellite-pictures?_=1680866121660

        Concerning the speed of this artefact, remember that the tangential speed at the equator is about 1600 km/h (40 000 km per 24 h) and so this is the speed of the sun zenith motion from east to west … like this “pseudo cloud“.

        H 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 1
        • H
          hangInThere @idefix37 | Premium
          last edited by

          @idefix37

          Here's one over the Malay Peninsula. The reflection of the Pahang River at 4:10PM is spectacular.

          The reflection also helps to bring out the very low level clouds which otherwise are almost too dark to make out.

          At 4PM:
          41a2facf-29c4-491f-b137-9da54a07b4a2-image.png

          At 4:10PM:
          01bee8ad-ad52-4aba-9605-7b8bb278f650-image.png

          At 4:20PM:
          3897f00a-d567-4eed-bcbf-21a8de7ac2a5-image.png

          idefix37I 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
          • idefix37I
            idefix37 Sailor Moderator @hangInThere
            last edited by idefix37

            @hangInThere
            Yes, what you show is the classical reflection of the sun on waters, sea, lakes, rivers, and sometime on clouds, at equinox period in Spring and Autumn.

            @Gerd-RBD
            Finally I found the reason of this “pseudo cloud” that you mentioned. In fact it is shown with “Blue” setting while it appears as the sun reflection with “Visible”. So the algorithm of the Blue layer (which is a mix of visible and infrared spectrum) transforms the sun reflection into a strange cloud :)

            1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 2
            • Gkikas LGPZG
              Gkikas LGPZ Moderator
              last edited by

              https://www.windy.com/articles/reflection-of-the-sun-on-satellite-pictures-11608?38.248,21.731,5

              idefix37I 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 1
              • idefix37I
                idefix37 Sailor Moderator @Gkikas LGPZ
                last edited by

                @Gkikas-LGPZ

                Thank you ! I did not remember this article :)

                1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 2
                • OliviajsdkfO
                  Oliviajsdkf
                  last edited by

                  This is indeed an extremely fast cloud movement, covering around 1,000 km per hour.

                  contexto

                  Gkikas LGPZG 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                  • Gkikas LGPZG
                    Gkikas LGPZ Moderator @Oliviajsdkf
                    last edited by

                    @Oliviajsdkf
                    This is not fast cloud, is sun glint
                    https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sunglint

                    1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 1
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