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Hong Kong weather
Hong KongHealth & Environment

Weather phenomenon known as ‘fire rainbow’ spotted in Hong Kong skies

Observatory shares video, explaining ‘circumhorizontal arc’ is not true rainbow but optical phenomenon formed by sunlight refracting through clouds

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A user under the name Felix Ip Photography shared pictures of a “fire rainbow” he spotted on Saturday above Sha Tin. Photo: Facebook / Felix Ip
Lo Hoi-ying

Wispy spiralling clouds painted in hues of orange, yellow, green and blue hovered in the skies above Hong Kong last week, a rare sight that only occurs when the sun is at a high angle.

The Hong Kong Observatory shared the video of the “fire rainbow” on Monday, a meteorological phenomenon so named because it looks like a rainbow burning in the sky.

“However, it’s not a true rainbow but rather an optical phenomenon called a circumhorizontal arc,” the forecaster explained in a social media post.

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“It forms when sunlight refracts through hexagonal, plate-shaped ice crystals within cirrus clouds.”

The formation of a circumhorizontal arc is highly dependent on the sun’s angle of incidence, it added, and only has a chance of appearing when the sun is near midday.

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The video was taken by a social media user, Star Fish, and was shared on the Community Weather Observing Scheme page on Facebook.

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