Noctilucent clouds are composed of tiny crystals of
water ice up to 100
nm in diameter and exist at a height of about , higher than any other clouds in Earth's atmosphere. Clouds in the Earth's lower atmosphere form when water collects on particles, but
mesospheric clouds may form directly from water vapour in addition to forming on dust particles. Data from the
Aeronomy of Ice in the Mesosphere satellite suggests that noctilucent clouds require water vapour, dust, and very cold temperatures to form. The sources of both the dust and the water vapour in the
upper atmosphere are not known with certainty. The dust is believed to come from
micrometeors, although particulates from
volcanoes and dust from the
troposphere are also possibilities. The moisture could be lifted through gaps in the
tropopause, as well as forming from the reaction of
methane with
hydroxyl radicals in the
stratosphere. The exhaust from
Space Shuttles, in use between 1981 and 2011, which was almost entirely water vapour after the detachment of the
Solid Rocket Booster at a height of about , was found to generate minuscule individual clouds. About half of the vapour was released into the
thermosphere, usually at altitudes of . In August 2014, a
SpaceX Falcon 9 also caused noctilucent clouds over
Orlando, Florida after a launch. The exhaust can be transported to the
Arctic region in little over a day, although the exact mechanism of this very high-speed transfer is unknown. As the water migrates northward, it falls from the thermosphere into the colder mesosphere, which occupies the region of the atmosphere just below. Although this mechanism is the cause of individual noctilucent clouds, it is not thought to be a major contributor to the phenomenon as a whole. and is extremely thin, the ice crystals can form only at temperatures below about . Clouds in the southern hemisphere are about higher than those in the northern hemisphere. Noctilucent clouds are known to exhibit high
radar reflectivity, in a frequency range of 50
MHz to 1.3 GHz. This behaviour is not well understood but a possible explanation is that the ice grains become coated with a thin metal film composed of
sodium and
iron, which makes the cloud far more reflective to radar, Sodium and iron atoms are stripped from incoming
micrometeors and settle into a layer just above the altitude of noctilucent clouds, and measurements have shown that these elements are severely depleted when the clouds are present. Other experiments have demonstrated that, at the extremely low temperatures of a noctilucent cloud, sodium vapour can rapidly be deposited onto an ice surface. with noctilucent clouds in the background == Discovery and investigation ==