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Leniculars over Mount St. Helens
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Mt. St. Helens, Friday May 20, 2005, Pictures by Brent and Jan LeBaron |
MT. St. Helens, which sits about 30 miles
from our house as the crow flies, continues to spew ash, while it is forming a lava
dome in the crater and still having minor tremors. Here, in this sunrise shot,
she appears to be blowing smoke rings (and anything so benign is welcomed, given
recent history.)
What forms the "smoke rings" is the air flowing over the mountain getting
pushed up higher as it goes up and over the top. The moisture content and initial
temperature are just right so that the moisture conden! se! s from a vapor to small
particles at the higher altitude. When the moving air moves past the peak and
comes down again, the particles evaporate back to an invisible vapor. The two
"pancakes" describe that there are two layers of air for which this is
happening, thus making this awesome picture possible. It's called a lenticular
wave in the aviation industry.
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Thanks to Mike Townsend for forwarding this remarkable story
to us
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This page is a story posted on Ensign and/or Saskatchewan
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Editor : Timothy W. Shire
Faster Than Light Communication
Box 1776, Tisdale, Saskatchewan, Canada, S0E 1T0
306 873 2004
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