No there is not.
Water vapor.
It can't.
This optical phenomenon is called a "halo." Halos are formed when light is refracted and reflected by ice crystals in the atmosphere, creating a ring of light around the sun or moon. The shape and size of the halo depend on the type and orientation of the ice crystals.
The bright ring around the sun is called the halo. A halo can be found around any object with light like the moon or sun.
There is not going to be a halo around the moon and if there was it is not prone to storm. Thank you!
Look in the related link below for information on this subject.
halo reach
halo reach
cirrostratus
The halo effect that is sometimes observed around the sun during a solar eclipse is known as the solar corona. This occurs when the moon aligns perfectly with the sun, obscuring its bright surface and allowing the sun's outer atmosphere, or corona, to become visible. The corona is much less bright than the sun's surface, so it appears as a glowing halo of light around the darkened moon.
The halo effect around the sun and moon is typically caused by cirrus clouds, which are high-altitude clouds composed of ice crystals. These ice crystals refract and reflect light, creating a halo that appears as a ring around the celestial body. The most common halo is a 22-degree halo, which forms when light is bent at a specific angle as it passes through the ice crystals. Thus, cirrus clouds play a key role in producing this optical phenomenon.
Cirrostratus