South Dakota Department of Transportation
Kermit Energy

Weird Storm Turns Sky Green

byMaggie Harrison Dupré
7.6.22, 4:48 PM EDT
South Dakota Department of Transportation

Extremely menacing vibes.

Spooky Skies

Nothing quite says "apocalypse" like Melon Powerade-colored heavens. Case in point, before a bout of severe weather yesterday, the sky in Sioux Falls, South Dakota turned a shade of green akin to that of the gamma radiation that turned Bruce Banner into the Hulk.

The ominous occurrence took place as a massive thunderstorm system called a derecho swept through the region, injuring several people and wreaking havoc on the property and power supplies of thousands of others.

Derechos are powerful and destructive, known for hurricane-like winds, heavy rains, and a knack for traveling hundreds of miles. But while these mighty weather events have occasionally been known to cause this viridescent phenomenon, The Washington Post reports that the neon hue witnessed yesterday is extremely uncommon.

Green Machine

There are a few theories as to why these green skies occur, with the predominant hypothesis having to do with the way heavy raindrops and hail are able to scatter and reflect light.

As Scientific American explains, thunderstorms often happen in the late afternoon and evening, when the setting sun casts shades of yellow and red across the daytime's blue sky. Water is exceptionally good at holding the color blue, and it's thought that raindrops of a certain diameter can disperse all but cerulean light. Thus, meteorologists posit that if a storm has enough liquid power behind it and hits at the perfect time of day, competing yellow and blue light will combine into green.

Yesterday's storm, however, pushed this conjecture to the brink.

"Even by that metric," WaPo meteorologist Matthew Cappucci wrote, referring to the prevailing theory, "the colors exhibited by storms over Siouxland and along the Interstate 29 corridor of South Dakota, the James River Valley and northwestern Iowa were unlike any in recent meteorological memory."

READ MORE: Derecho turns sky green, sweeps through 5 states with 90 mph winds [WaPo]

More on bizarre weather events: Startup Says Its Tech Can Kill Hurricanes Before They Get Strong


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