Did you see the ring around the sun today? It's called a sun halo and made an appearance over much of Western Washington on Sunday.
Here's how it forms:
A sun halo becomes visible when sunlight shines through ice crystals way up in the upper levels of our atmosphere. A similar occurrence is called a sundog during which a rainbow-colored splash appears to the left or the right of the morning sun.
Whenever we have high-level moisture, a lot of those thin, wispy clouds are made up of ice crystals instead of liquid droplets. Those ice crystals refract or bend the light to create a ring around the sun and give a halo effect.
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