Luminiflora Celestis, named from Latin luminis (light), flos (flower), and celestis (celestial), is a bioluminescent flowering plant 30-50 cm tall with a delicate stem and loosely clustered blooms. Petals are translucent, waxy, with soft violet-tinted upper petals and fiery amber lower petals, both speckled with luminescent orange glands arranged in irregular whorls. Leaves are thin, smooth, with subtle venation. Bioluminescence emits primarily at 470-530 nm, showing soft blue-green glow and intense orange phosphorescence at petal bases due to luciferin-luciferase reactions in specialized epidermal cells. Native to tropical rainforest understories, it thrives in humid, shaded 15-30°C habitats, attracting nocturnal pollinators like moths and bats via bioluminescent signals and gentle swaying. Taxonomically in Ethereal Petalachordata, family with ten glowing species. Endangered, highlighting conservation need.