Lenticular Clouds over Mount Etna

Model: gemini-2.0-flash-exp
Prompt version: 1.0
What’s happening above that Volcano?
Although Mount Etna is seen erupting, the clouds are not related to the eruption. They are lenticular clouds formed when moist air is forced upwards near a mountain or volcano.
The surreal scene was captured by chance late last month when the Astrophotography went to Mount Etna, a UNESCO World Heritage Site in Sicily, Italy, to photograph the conjunction between the Moon and the Star Aldebaran. The Moon appears in a bright crescent phase, illuminating an edge of the lower lenticular cloud.
Red hot lava flows on the right.
Besides some breathtaking stills, a companion Time-lapse Video of the scene shows the lenticular clouds forming and wavering as Stars trail far in the distance. Star Trails.
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