
The Belt of Venus over Paranal Observatory atop Cerro Paranal in the Atacama Desert, northern Chile[1]

Crepuscular rays at sunrise in Malibu, California
Atmospheric optical phenomena include:
- Afterglow
 - Airglow
 - Alexander's band, the dark region between the two bows of a double rainbow.
 - Alpenglow
 - Anthelion
 - Anticrepuscular rays
 - Aurora
 - Auroral light (northern and southern lights, aurora borealis and aurora australis)
 - Belt of Venus
 - Brocken Spectre
 - Circumhorizontal arc
 - Circumzenithal arc
 - Cloud iridescence
 - Crepuscular rays
 - Earth's shadow
 - Earthquake lights
 - Glories
 - Green flash
 - Halos, of Sun or Moon, including sun dogs
 - Haze
 - Heiligenschein or halo effect, partly caused by the opposition effect
 - Ice blink
 - Light pillar
 - Lightning
 - Mirages (including Fata Morgana)
 - Monochrome Rainbow
 - Moon dog
 - Moonbow
 - Nacreous cloud/Polar stratospheric cloud
 - Rainbow
 - Subsun
 - Sun dog
 - Tangent arc
 - Tyndall effect
 - Upper-atmospheric lightning, including red sprites, Blue jets, and ELVES
 - Water sky
 

A double rainbow at Minsi Lake, Pennsylvania

Atmospheric optical phenomenon
See also
References
- ↑ "Belt of Venus over Cerro Paranal". Picture of the Week. ESO. Retrieved 14 August 2013.
 
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