This huge expanse of Stratocumulus cloud over the Indian Ocean was photographed by the MODIS camera aboard NASA’s Aqua satellite. The area in the image extends about 430 miles (700 km) from one side to the other. Within the cloud layer appears radial patterns known as actinoform clouds, a name derived from the Greek word for ‘ray’. These cloud patterns were only discovered in 1962 when they showed up in early satellite photographs. No-one had ever noticed actinoform clouds before due to their huge size, which can be as great at 180 miles (300 km) across. You just can’t see a large enough expanse of cloud beneath a low formation like this marine Stratocumulus to be able to see the huge patterns. 60 years on from first spotting them, we still know very little about actinoform clouds. They form in Stratocumulus clouds over oceans, with all the world’s oceans producing them. They sometimes form in lines, and other times in random arrangements like the ones here. They seem to be associated with the onset of light drizzle. Other than that, the huge spoked patterns of actinoform clouds remain one of the great mysteries of our low atmosphere.
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Mark Livingston
But, NASA is fake! Space doesn't exist! AND those are chemicals! 🤣🍻

Dennis Huff
And yet the military is putting toxic chemicals trails in the sky. Who's the stupid ones know?
