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Today was a normal day, except the sun and moon colors were strange. After 5pm, the sky was covered with cirrostratus-like translucent clouds and the sky was a blend of blue and grey.

Everything would be fine, except that the sun was orange between 4-5pm. Then by around 5-6pm, the sun was completely red like blood even though it was still high up, and it was 1+ more hour to sunset.

Then, I didn't look at the sky until 8pm when it was already dark. When I went out, the moon was red just like the sun couple hours before.

The whole thing I saw from around south side od Chicago on US Labor Day (4 Sep, 2017). I didn't take pictures of the sun unfortunately because I disregarded its color, but I took pictures of the moon.

Here's how the moon looked through my phone camera, through binoculars: Red moon 1

Here is a similar picture but edited so that the moon looks exactly like I saw it with naked eye: Red moon 2

What can thia be caused by? (As of writing this at 10:06pm the moon is still red, and it is 6 hours since both the sun and the moon were red/orange)

EDIT: I also didn't see anything about this phenomenon in the media which is strange, and once again, this was seen from Chicago.

KKZiomek
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    I experienced the same in Germany on the 31st of August. – Zaibis Sep 05 '17 at 07:43
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    If you think it's bad in Chicago you should see what we woke up to in Seattle today. There's a thin layer of ash on everything. – Eric Lippert Sep 05 '17 at 17:13
  • Is it safe to look at the sun when it's in this condition? We still have our eclipse glasses but you can't see anything at all with them on. – stannius Sep 05 '17 at 20:00
  • @stannius, yes, it's as fine as it is to look at the sun normally (not very fine, but not like an eclipse) –  Sep 05 '17 at 21:15
  • @Eric, I live in seattle, and I left my window open last night (so hot). Woke up to ash ALL OVER my room. –  Sep 05 '17 at 21:15
  • Smoke from western fires. We've had this in southern Minnesota for several days. – Hot Licks Sep 06 '17 at 03:38

1 Answers1

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Smoke. There was significant smoke across the USA, which attenuated the light from the sun/moon due to increased scattering. The smoke particles effectively cause the light to reflect in different directions, so you see more colors.

See below for the HMS Smoke Polygons for the day, which clearly shows smoke over your region from the intense smoke/wildfire activity in the Pacific Northwest. You can also see the NASA Worldview composite of VIIRS visible imagery for the day, with fire locations in red.

HMS

enter image description here

f.thorpe
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