A composite image of milkyway and a moon halo captured in Mersing, Malaysia before the peak of Perseids Meteor Shower and during the conjunction of Moon and planet Saturn on 13 Aug. The milkyway wasn't really visible at this point as the sky was still bright but as the moon went lower, the milkyway galaxy became visible gradually and the entire process was filmed as part of my 12 hours timelapse at this location.
A 22° halo is a halo, one type of optical phenomenon, forming a circle 22° around the sun, or occasionally the moon (also called a moon ring or winter halo). It forms as sunlight is refracted in millions of randomly oriented hexagonal ice crystals suspended in the atmosphere (Source: Wikipedia). You can see the moon halo with naked eyes too.
From this image, you can also see Arcturus (top right), which is the fourth brightest star in the night sky and it's the brightest star in the constellation Bootes. Planet Venus is visible in the bottom right and planet Saturn is visible near the top of the moon. Milkyway galaxy, which is a composite, is also visible when the moon was nearer to the horizon.
16 August 2013 - Featured in EarthSky.com
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