THE STORM DROPPED A RAINBOW CORE
THE STORM DROPPED A RAINBOW CORE
A black anvil cloud stacks up like a ceiling… then a neon column punches straight down—electric blues, hot pinks, and a full spectrum beam...while lightning forks around it like a cage.
In real weather, bright “rainbow columns” can show up when sunlight (usually near sunset) gets split into colors by tiny ice crystals or droplets, and the colors become visible where the light path crosses thicker moisture (virga/rain shafts). Lightning is separate—it’s an electrical discharge inside the storm...but the flash can make nearby haze and rain look even brighter for a split second.

Reacties
Een reactie posten