Daily OpusEverything I write is freely rebloggable. Just keep the source and tell people about my books :D [Until I decide otherwise, my pronouns are Ze/Hir/Hirself. As in "Ze went to the shops to get hir medication hirself". Thank you for the respect.]
There are only so many polite words that come to mind when one spots a
ship apparently hovering above the ocean during a stroll along the
English coastline.
David Morris, who captured the extraordinary sight on camera,
declared himself “stunned” when he noticed a giant tanker floating above
the water as he looked out to sea from a hamlet near Falmouth in Cornwall.
The effect is an example of an optical illusion known as a superior mirage.
Such illusions are reasonably common in the Arctic but can also happen
in UK winters when the atmospheric conditions are right, though they are
very rare.
The illusion is caused by a meteorological phenomenon called a
temperature inversion. Normally, the air temperature drops with
increasing altitude, making mountaintops colder than the foothills. But
in a temperature inversion, warm air sits on top of a band of colder
air, playing havoc with our visual perception. The inversion in Cornwall
was caused by chilly air lying over the relatively cold sea with warmer
air above.