Steel Giants Floating on a Blanket of Fog
Dubai’s marina area seen from the 36th floor, even 100ft-cranes barely visible:
Tall spires rise with the first rays of the sun over a blanket of white, carefully poking through a dense cloud cover. Surreal? Yes. Photoshopped? Never. Just the incredible interplay of fog, skyscrapers and sunlight that seems to play tricks with our eyes. Some cities like Dubai, Vancouver and San Francisco just have all the ingredients for stunning fogfloater pics.
The London Docklands in the Fog:
What is the difference between fog and cloud cover? Fog is also a cloud, just a really low one that touches the ground. Its formation has to do with various factors, one being the difference between temperature and dew point: If it is less than 2.5 °C (4 °F), fog begins to form and water vapour condenses into minuscule water droplets.
Istanbul’s Levent area under a fog blanket:
In addition, water requires a non-gaseous surface like dust, pollutants, aerosols or salt to transform from vapour to liquid. Because of the high salt content in the air, coastal regions are often foggy – San Francisco being a famous example.
Here, under a thick fog blanket, only the Sutro Tower sticking out and downtown not yet covered:
Foggy Miami morning, seen from the 55th floor looking over Brickell Avenue:
Places where cold and warm air and water meet are also fog prone; so are valleys that trap warmer or more polluted air, therefore encouraging fog formation upon hitting cooler air or a certain temperature. Dubai, for example, located on the Persian Gulf Coast yet also within the Arabian Desert is prone to fog that blankets the city, letting only its many skyscrapers peek through in a spectacular fashion.
All in a row:
Under construction skyscrapers in Doha, Qatar, also located on the Persian Gulf:
Vancouver is another city whose geography makes it fog prone: Vancouver is located between Burrard Inlet to the north, Fraser River to the south and the North Shore Mountains that dominate the cityscape. On a foggy day, the view from one of the nearby mountain tops is spectacular.
Vancouver Bay swathed in fog at sunset with mountain backdrop:
Vancouver in the fog as seen from Grouse Mountain:
Downtown Vancouver as seen from Cypress Mountain:
Did you know that there is a difference between fog and mist? A thin one, literally: A dense cloud that reduces visibility to under 1 km is called fog; a slightly less dense cloud that produces visibility anywhere from 1 km to 2 km is called mist. In the last three pictures, we’re clearly looking at fog, not mist.
As the sun is rising out of the fog, so is Chicago:
Not a ship but a building breaking through morning fog in New Orleans:
With a dramatic mountain backdrop in Cape Town:
Fog over housing complexes in Szczecin, Poland:
Steel Giants Floating on a Blanket of Fog
- awais
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