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Halo (optical phenomenon)

A halo (from Ancient Greek ἅλως (hálōs) 'threshing floor, disk')[1] is an optical phenomenon produced by light (typically from the Sun or Moon) interacting with ice crystals suspended in the atmosphere. Halos can have many forms, ranging from colored or white rings to arcs and spots in the sky. Many of these appear near the Sun or Moon, but others occur elsewhere or even in the opposite part of the sky. Among the best known halo types are the circular halo (properly called the 22° halo), light pillars, and sun dogs, but many others occur; some are fairly common while others are extremely rare.

A 22° halo around the Sun, observed over Bretton Woods, New Hampshire, USA on February 13, 2021
A 22° halo and circumscribed halo around the Moon, observed near Kitt Peak National Observatory
From top to bottom:
A circumzenithal arc, supralateral arc, Parry arc, upper tangent arc, and 22° halo
A halo display observed over the South Pole

The ice crystals responsible for halos are typically suspended in cirrus or cirrostratus clouds in the upper troposphere (5–10 km (3.1–6.2 mi)), but in cold weather they can also float near the ground, in which case they are referred to as diamond dust. The particular shape and orientation of the crystals are responsible for the type of halo observed. Light is reflected and refracted by the ice crystals and may split into colors because of dispersion. The crystals behave like prisms and mirrors, refracting and reflecting light between their faces, sending shafts of light in particular directions.

Atmospheric optical phenomena like halos were part of weather lore, which was an empirical means of weather forecasting before meteorology was developed. They often do indicate that rain will fall within the next 24 hours, since the cirrostratus clouds that cause them can signify an approaching frontal system.

Other common types of optical phenomena involving water droplets rather than ice crystals include the glory and the rainbow.

History edit

While Aristotle had mentioned halos and parhelia, in antiquity, the first European descriptions of complex displays were those of Christoph Scheiner in Rome (c. 1630), Johannes Hevelius in Danzig (1661), and Tobias Lowitz in St Petersburg (c. 1794). Chinese observers had recorded these for centuries, the first reference being a section of the "Official History of the Chin Dynasty" (Chin Shu) in 637, on the "Ten Haloes", giving technical terms for 26 solar halo phenomena.[2]

Vädersolstavlan edit

 
The so-called "Sun Dog Painting" (Vädersolstavlan) depicting Stockholm in 1535 and the celestial phenomenon at the time interpreted as an ominous presage

While mostly known and often quoted for being the oldest color depiction of the city of Stockholm, Vädersolstavlan (Swedish; "The Sundog Painting", literally "The Weather Sun Painting") is arguably also one of the oldest known depictions of a halo display, including a pair of sun dogs. For two hours in the morning of 20 April 1535, the skies over the city were filled with white circles and arcs crossing the sky, while additional suns (i.e., sun dogs) appeared around the Sun.

Light pillar edit

A light pillar, or sun pillar, appears as a vertical pillar or column of light rising from the Sun near sunset or sunrise, though it can appear below the Sun, particularly if the observer is at a high elevation or altitude. Hexagonal plate- and column-shaped ice crystals cause the phenomenon. Plate crystals generally cause pillars only when the Sun is within 6 degrees of the horizon; column crystals can cause a pillar when the Sun is as high as 20 degrees above the horizon. The crystals tend to orient themselves near-horizontally as they fall or float through the air, and the width and visibility of a sun pillar depend on crystal alignment.

Light pillars can also form around the Moon, and around street lights or other bright lights. Pillars forming from ground-based light sources may appear much taller than those associated with the Sun or Moon. Since the observer is closer to the light source, crystal orientation matters less in the formation of these pillars.

Circular halo edit

 
Ice crystals (only four represented above) form the 22° halo, with red and blue light being refracted at slightly different angles

Among the best-known halos is the 22° halo, often just called "halo", which appears as a large ring around the Sun or Moon with a radius of about 22° (roughly the width of an outstretched hand at arm's length). The ice crystals that cause the 22° halo are oriented semi-randomly in the atmosphere, in contrast to the horizontal orientation required for some other halos such as sun dogs and light pillars. As a result of the optical properties of the ice crystals involved, no light is reflected towards the inside of the ring, leaving the sky noticeably darker than the sky around it, and giving it the impression of a "hole in the sky".[3] The 22° halo is not to be confused with the corona, which is a different optical phenomenon caused by water droplets rather than ice crystals, and which has the appearance of a multicolored disk rather than a ring.

Other halos can form at 46° to the Sun, or at the horizon, or around the zenith, and can appear as full halos or incomplete arcs.

Bottlinger's ring edit

A Bottlinger's ring is a rare type of halo that is elliptical instead of circular. It has a small diameter, which makes it very difficult to see in the Sun's glare and more likely to be noticed around the dimmer subsun, often seen from mountain tops or airplanes. Bottlinger's rings are not well understood yet. It is suggested that they are formed by very flat pyramidal ice crystals with faces at uncommonly low angles, suspended horizontally in the atmosphere. These precise and physically problematic requirements would explain why the halo is very rare.[4]

Other names edit

In the Cornish dialect of English, a halo around the sun or the moon is called a cock's eye and is an omen of bad weather. The term is related to the Breton word kog-heol (sun cock) which has the same meaning.[5] In Nepal, the halo round the sun is called Indrasabha with a connotation of the assembly court of Lord Indra – the Hindu god of lightning, thunder, and rain.[6]

Artificial halos edit

The natural phenomena may be reproduced artificially by several means. Firstly, by computer simulations,[7][8] or secondly by experimental means. Regarding the latter, this occurs when a single crystal is rotated around the appropriate axis/axes, or a chemical approach. A still further and more indirect experimental approach is to find analogous refraction geometries.

Analogous refraction approach edit

 
Analogous refraction demonstration experiment for the circumzenithal arc.[9] Here, it is mistakenly labelled as an artificial rainbow in Gilberts book.[10]

This approach employs the fact that in some cases the average geometry of refraction through an ice crystal may be imitated / mimicked via the refraction through another geometrical object. In this way, the circumzenithal arc, the circumhorizontal arc, and the suncave Parry arcs may be recreated by refraction through rotationally symmetric (i.e. non-prismatic) static bodies.[9] A particularly simple table-top experiment reproduces artificially the colorful circumzenithal and circumhorizontal arcs using a water glass only. The refraction through the cylinder of water turns out to be (almost) identical to the rotationally averaged refraction through an upright hexagonal ice crystal / plate-oriented crystals, thereby creating vividly colored circumzenithal and the circumhorizontal arcs. In fact, the water glass experiment is often confused as representing a rainbow and has been around at least since 1920.[10]

Following Huygens' idea of the (false) mechanism of the 22° parhelia, one may also illuminate (from the side) a water-filled cylindrical glass with an inner central obstruction of half the glasses' diameter to achieve upon projection on a screen an appearance which closely resembles parhelia (cf. footnote [39] in Ref.,[9] or see here[11]), an inner red edge transitioning into a white band at larger angles on both sides of the direct transmission direction. However, while the visual match is close, this particular experiment does not involve a fake caustic mechanism and is thus no real analogue.

Chemical approaches edit

The earliest chemical recipes to generate artificial halos has been put forward by Brewster and studied further by A. Cornu in 1889.[12] The idea was to generate crystals by precipitation of a salt solution. The innumerable small crystals hereby generated will then, upon illumination with light, cause halos corresponding to the particular crystal geometry and the orientation / alignment. Several recipes exist and continue to be discovered.[13] Rings are a common outcome of such experiments.[14] But also Parry arcs have been artificially produced in this way.[15]

Mechanical approaches edit

Single axis edit

The earliest experimental studies on halo phenomena have been attributed[16] to Auguste Bravais in 1847.[17] Bravais used an equilateral glass prism which he spun around its vertical axis. When illuminated by parallel white light, this produced an artificial parhelic circle and many of the embedded parhelia. Similarly, A. Wegener used hexagonal rotating crystals to produce artificial subparhelia.[18] In a more recent version of this experiment, many more embedded parhelia have been found using commercially available[19] hexagonal BK7 glass crystals.[20] Simple experiments like these can be used for educational purposes and demonstration experiments.[13][21] Unfortunately, using glass crystals one cannot reproduce the circumzenithal arc or the circumhorizontal arc due to total internal reflections preventing the required ray-paths when  .

Even earlier than Bravais, the Italian scientist F. Venturi experimented with pointed water-filled prisms to demonstrate the circumzenithal arc.[22][23] However, this explanation was replaced later by the CZA's correct explanation by Bravais.[17]

 
Artificial Halo projected on a spherical screen.[24][25] Visible are: Tangential arcs, Parry arcs, (sub)parhelia, parhelic circle, heliac arcs

Artificial ice crystals have been employed to create halos which are otherwise unattainable in the mechanical approach via the use of glass crystals, e.g. circumzenithal and circumhorizontal arcs.[26] The use of ice crystals ensures that the generated halos have the same angular coordinates as the natural phenomena. Other crystals such as sodium fluoride (NaF) also have a refractive index close to ice and have been used in the past.[27]

Two axes edit

In order to produce artificial halos such as the tangent arcs or the circumscribed halo one should rotate a single columnar hexagonal crystal about 2 axes. Similarly, the Lowitz arcs can be created by rotating a single plate crystal about two axes. This can be done by engineered halo machines. The first such machine was constructed in 2003;[28] several more followed.[25][29] Putting such machines inside spherical projection screens, and by the principle of the so-called sky transform,[30] the analogy is nearly perfect. A realization using micro-versions of the aforementioned machines produces authentic distortion-free projections of such complex artificial halos.[9][24][25] Finally, superposition of several images and projections produced by such halo machines may be combined to create a single image. The resulting superposition image is then a representation of complex natural halo displays containing many different orientation sets of ice prisms.[24][25]

Three axes edit

The experimental reproduction of circular halos is the most difficult using a single crystal only, while it is the simplest and typically achieved one using chemical recipes. Using a single crystal, one needs to realize all possible 3D orientations of the crystal. This has recently been achieved by two approaches. The first one using pneumatics and a sophisticated rigging,[29] and a second one using an Arduino-based random walk machine which stochastically reorients a crystal embedded in a transparent thin-walled sphere.[21]

Gallery edit

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ "halo". The American Heritage Dictionary of the English Language (5th ed.). HarperCollins.
  2. ^ Ping-Yü, Ho; Needham, Joseph (1959). "Ancient Chinese Observations of Solar Haloes and Parhelia". Weather. 14 (4). Wiley: 124–134. Bibcode:1959Wthr...14..124P. doi:10.1002/j.1477-8696.1959.tb02450.x. ISSN 0043-1656.
  3. ^ "Disk with a hole in the sky". Atmospheric Optics. Retrieved 3 August 2016.
  4. ^ Les Cowley. "Bottlinger's Rings". Atmospheric Optics. Retrieved 2017-06-26.
  5. ^ Nance, Robert Morton; Pool, P. A. S. (1963). A Glossary of Cornish Sea-Words. Cornwall: Federation of Old Cornwall Societies. p. 61.
  6. ^ "Nepal skies graced with extraordinary 'circular rainbow' halo around sun". The Himalayan Times. 9 July 2015. Retrieved 3 August 2016.
  7. ^ Cowley, Les; Schroeder, Michael. "HaloSim3". atoptics.co.uk.
  8. ^ . saunalahti.fi. Archived from the original on 2016-10-07.
  9. ^ a b c d Selmke, Markus; Selmke, Sarah (2017). "Artificial circumzenithal and circumhorizontal arcs". American Journal of Physics. 85 (8). American Association of Physics Teachers: 575–581. arXiv:1608.08664. Bibcode:2017AmJPh..85..575S. doi:10.1119/1.4984802. ISSN 0002-9505. S2CID 118613833.
  10. ^ a b "Experiment No. 94". Gilbert light experiments for boys. 1920. p. 98 – via archive.org.
  11. ^ "Experiments". photonicsdesign.jimdofree.com.
  12. ^ Cornu, A. (1889). "Sur la reproduction artificielle des halos et des cercles parhéliques". Comtes Rendus Ac. Paris (in French). 108: 429–433.
  13. ^ a b Vollmer, Michael; Tammer, Robert (1998-03-20). "Laboratory experiments in atmospheric optics". Applied Optics. 37 (9). The Optical Society: 1557-1568. Bibcode:1998ApOpt..37.1557V. doi:10.1364/ao.37.001557. ISSN 0003-6935. PMID 18268748.
  14. ^ Gislén, Lars; Mattsson, Jan O (2007-10-16). "Tabletop divergent-light halos". Physics Education. 42 (6). IOP Publishing: 579–584. Bibcode:2007PhyEd..42..579G. doi:10.1088/0031-9120/42/6/003. ISSN 0031-9120. S2CID 122261149.
  15. ^ Ulanowski, Zbigniew (2005-09-20). "Ice analog halos". Applied Optics. 44 (27). The Optical Society: 5754–5758. Bibcode:2005ApOpt..44.5754U. doi:10.1364/ao.44.005754. ISSN 0003-6935. PMID 16201438.
  16. ^ de Beaumont, M. Élie (1869). Memoir of Auguste Bravais. Washington, DC: Smithsonian Institution.
  17. ^ a b "Mémoire sur les halos et les phénomènes optiques qui les accompagnent". J. de l'École Royale Polytechnique (in French). 31 (18). §XXIV – Reproduction artificielle des phénomènes optiques dus à des prismes à axe vertical, Figures: PL I: Fig. 48, PL II: Fig: 49–54: 1–270. 1847.{{cite journal}}: CS1 maint: location (link)
  18. ^ Wegner, A. (1917). "Die Nebensonnen unter dem Horizont". Meteorol. Z. (in German). 34–52 (8/9): 295–298.
  19. ^ "Homogenizing Light rods / Light pipes". edmundoptics.com.
  20. ^ Borchardt, Sarah; Selmke, Markus (2015-07-21). "Intensity distribution of the parhelic circle and embedded parhelia at zero solar elevation: theory and experiments". Applied Optics. 54 (22). The Optical Society: 6608–6615. Bibcode:2015ApOpt..54.6608B. doi:10.1364/ao.54.006608. ISSN 0003-6935. PMID 26368071. S2CID 39382489.
  21. ^ a b Selmke, Markus (2015). "Artificial halos". American Journal of Physics. 83 (9). American Association of Physics Teachers: 751–760. Bibcode:2015AmJPh..83..751S. doi:10.1119/1.4923458. ISSN 0002-9505.
  22. ^ Venturi, F. Commentarii sopra ottica. Tav VIII, Fig 17, p. 219; arc: PGQ, Fig 27, p. 213.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location (link)
  23. ^ Gehler, Johann Samuel Traugott (1829). Physikalisches Wörterbuch: neu bearbeitet von Brandes, Gmelin, Horner, Muncke, Pfaff (in German). E. B. Schwickert. p. 494 – via archive.org.
  24. ^ a b c "Spherical projection screen for artificial halos". BoredPanda.com.
  25. ^ a b c d Selmke, Markus; Selmke, Sarah (2016). "Complex artificial halos for the classroom". American Journal of Physics. 84 (7). American Association of Physics Teachers: 561–564. Bibcode:2016AmJPh..84..561S. doi:10.1119/1.4953342. ISSN 0002-9505.
  26. ^ "26. - 29.11.2015 - Boží Dar". meteoros.de. Arbeitskreis Meteore e.V. 2015. Retrieved January 31, 2024.
  27. ^ Barkey, B.; Liou, K.N.; Takano, Y.; et al. (1999). "An Analog Light Scattering Experiment of Hexagonal Icelike Particles. Part II: Experimental and Theoretical Results". Journal of the Atmospheric Sciences. 56.
  28. ^ Vollmer, Michael; Greenler, Robert (2003-01-20). "Halo and mirage demonstrations in atmospheric optics". Applied Optics. 42 (3). The Optical Society: 394–398. Bibcode:2003ApOpt..42..394V. doi:10.1364/ao.42.000394. ISSN 0003-6935. PMID 12570259.
  29. ^ a b Großmann, Michael; Möllmann, Klaus-Peter; Vollmer, Michael (2014-12-15). "Artificially generated halos: rotating sample crystals around various axes". Applied Optics. 54 (4). The Optical Society: B97-106. doi:10.1364/ao.54.000b97. ISSN 1559-128X. PMID 25967845.
  30. ^ "Sky Transform". atoptics.co.uk.

External links edit

  • Halo explanations and image galleries at Atmospheric Optics
  • Meteoros AKM – Halo explanations and image galleries (in German)
  • Halo reports of interesting halo observations around the World
  • Halo in Chisinau Moldova (photo and video)
  • Walter Tape & Jarmo Moilanen, Atmospheric Halos and the Search for Angle x (free e-book)
  • Halo Phenomena – Hyperphysics

halo, optical, phenomenon, other, uses, halo, disambiguation, this, article, needs, additional, citations, verification, please, help, improve, this, article, adding, citations, reliable, sources, unsourced, material, challenged, removed, find, sources, halo, . For other uses see Halo disambiguation This article needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Halo optical phenomenon news newspapers books scholar JSTOR September 2014 Learn how and when to remove this template message A halo from Ancient Greek ἅlws halōs threshing floor disk 1 is an optical phenomenon produced by light typically from the Sun or Moon interacting with ice crystals suspended in the atmosphere Halos can have many forms ranging from colored or white rings to arcs and spots in the sky Many of these appear near the Sun or Moon but others occur elsewhere or even in the opposite part of the sky Among the best known halo types are the circular halo properly called the 22 halo light pillars and sun dogs but many others occur some are fairly common while others are extremely rare A 22 halo around the Sun observed over Bretton Woods New Hampshire USA on February 13 2021 A 22 halo and circumscribed halo around the Moon observed near Kitt Peak National Observatory From top to bottom A circumzenithal arc supralateral arc Parry arc upper tangent arc and 22 halo A halo display observed over the South Pole The ice crystals responsible for halos are typically suspended in cirrus or cirrostratus clouds in the upper troposphere 5 10 km 3 1 6 2 mi but in cold weather they can also float near the ground in which case they are referred to as diamond dust The particular shape and orientation of the crystals are responsible for the type of halo observed Light is reflected and refracted by the ice crystals and may split into colors because of dispersion The crystals behave like prisms and mirrors refracting and reflecting light between their faces sending shafts of light in particular directions Atmospheric optical phenomena like halos were part of weather lore which was an empirical means of weather forecasting before meteorology was developed They often do indicate that rain will fall within the next 24 hours since the cirrostratus clouds that cause them can signify an approaching frontal system Other common types of optical phenomena involving water droplets rather than ice crystals include the glory and the rainbow Contents 1 History 1 1 Vadersolstavlan 2 Light pillar 3 Circular halo 4 Bottlinger s ring 5 Other names 6 Artificial halos 6 1 Analogous refraction approach 6 2 Chemical approaches 6 3 Mechanical approaches 6 3 1 Single axis 6 3 2 Two axes 6 3 3 Three axes 7 Gallery 8 See also 9 References 10 External linksHistory editWhile Aristotle had mentioned halos and parhelia in antiquity the first European descriptions of complex displays were those of Christoph Scheiner in Rome c 1630 Johannes Hevelius in Danzig 1661 and Tobias Lowitz in St Petersburg c 1794 Chinese observers had recorded these for centuries the first reference being a section of the Official History of the Chin Dynasty Chin Shu in 637 on the Ten Haloes giving technical terms for 26 solar halo phenomena 2 Vadersolstavlan edit nbsp The so called Sun Dog Painting Vadersolstavlan depicting Stockholm in 1535 and the celestial phenomenon at the time interpreted as an ominous presage While mostly known and often quoted for being the oldest color depiction of the city of Stockholm Vadersolstavlan Swedish The Sundog Painting literally The Weather Sun Painting is arguably also one of the oldest known depictions of a halo display including a pair of sun dogs For two hours in the morning of 20 April 1535 the skies over the city were filled with white circles and arcs crossing the sky while additional suns i e sun dogs appeared around the Sun Light pillar editMain article Light pillar A light pillar or sun pillar appears as a vertical pillar or column of light rising from the Sun near sunset or sunrise though it can appear below the Sun particularly if the observer is at a high elevation or altitude Hexagonal plate and column shaped ice crystals cause the phenomenon Plate crystals generally cause pillars only when the Sun is within 6 degrees of the horizon column crystals can cause a pillar when the Sun is as high as 20 degrees above the horizon The crystals tend to orient themselves near horizontally as they fall or float through the air and the width and visibility of a sun pillar depend on crystal alignment Light pillars can also form around the Moon and around street lights or other bright lights Pillars forming from ground based light sources may appear much taller than those associated with the Sun or Moon Since the observer is closer to the light source crystal orientation matters less in the formation of these pillars Circular halo editFurther information 22 halo and 46 halo nbsp Ice crystals only four represented above form the 22 halo with red and blue light being refracted at slightly different angles Among the best known halos is the 22 halo often just called halo which appears as a large ring around the Sun or Moon with a radius of about 22 roughly the width of an outstretched hand at arm s length The ice crystals that cause the 22 halo are oriented semi randomly in the atmosphere in contrast to the horizontal orientation required for some other halos such as sun dogs and light pillars As a result of the optical properties of the ice crystals involved no light is reflected towards the inside of the ring leaving the sky noticeably darker than the sky around it and giving it the impression of a hole in the sky 3 The 22 halo is not to be confused with the corona which is a different optical phenomenon caused by water droplets rather than ice crystals and which has the appearance of a multicolored disk rather than a ring Other halos can form at 46 to the Sun or at the horizon or around the zenith and can appear as full halos or incomplete arcs Bottlinger s ring editA Bottlinger s ring is a rare type of halo that is elliptical instead of circular It has a small diameter which makes it very difficult to see in the Sun s glare and more likely to be noticed around the dimmer subsun often seen from mountain tops or airplanes Bottlinger s rings are not well understood yet It is suggested that they are formed by very flat pyramidal ice crystals with faces at uncommonly low angles suspended horizontally in the atmosphere These precise and physically problematic requirements would explain why the halo is very rare 4 Other names editIn the Cornish dialect of English a halo around the sun or the moon is called a cock s eye and is an omen of bad weather The term is related to the Breton word kog heol sun cock which has the same meaning 5 In Nepal the halo round the sun is called Indrasabha with a connotation of the assembly court of Lord Indra the Hindu god of lightning thunder and rain 6 Artificial halos editThe natural phenomena may be reproduced artificially by several means Firstly by computer simulations 7 8 or secondly by experimental means Regarding the latter this occurs when a single crystal is rotated around the appropriate axis axes or a chemical approach A still further and more indirect experimental approach is to find analogous refraction geometries Analogous refraction approach edit nbsp Analogous refraction demonstration experiment for the circumzenithal arc 9 Here it is mistakenly labelled as an artificial rainbow in Gilberts book 10 This approach employs the fact that in some cases the average geometry of refraction through an ice crystal may be imitated mimicked via the refraction through another geometrical object In this way the circumzenithal arc the circumhorizontal arc and the suncave Parry arcs may be recreated by refraction through rotationally symmetric i e non prismatic static bodies 9 A particularly simple table top experiment reproduces artificially the colorful circumzenithal and circumhorizontal arcs using a water glass only The refraction through the cylinder of water turns out to be almost identical to the rotationally averaged refraction through an upright hexagonal ice crystal plate oriented crystals thereby creating vividly colored circumzenithal and the circumhorizontal arcs In fact the water glass experiment is often confused as representing a rainbow and has been around at least since 1920 10 Following Huygens idea of the false mechanism of the 22 parhelia one may also illuminate from the side a water filled cylindrical glass with an inner central obstruction of half the glasses diameter to achieve upon projection on a screen an appearance which closely resembles parhelia cf footnote 39 in Ref 9 or see here 11 an inner red edge transitioning into a white band at larger angles on both sides of the direct transmission direction However while the visual match is close this particular experiment does not involve a fake caustic mechanism and is thus no real analogue Chemical approaches edit The earliest chemical recipes to generate artificial halos has been put forward by Brewster and studied further by A Cornu in 1889 12 The idea was to generate crystals by precipitation of a salt solution The innumerable small crystals hereby generated will then upon illumination with light cause halos corresponding to the particular crystal geometry and the orientation alignment Several recipes exist and continue to be discovered 13 Rings are a common outcome of such experiments 14 But also Parry arcs have been artificially produced in this way 15 Mechanical approaches edit Single axis edit The earliest experimental studies on halo phenomena have been attributed 16 to Auguste Bravais in 1847 17 Bravais used an equilateral glass prism which he spun around its vertical axis When illuminated by parallel white light this produced an artificial parhelic circle and many of the embedded parhelia Similarly A Wegener used hexagonal rotating crystals to produce artificial subparhelia 18 In a more recent version of this experiment many more embedded parhelia have been found using commercially available 19 hexagonal BK7 glass crystals 20 Simple experiments like these can be used for educational purposes and demonstration experiments 13 21 Unfortunately using glass crystals one cannot reproduce the circumzenithal arc or the circumhorizontal arc due to total internal reflections preventing the required ray paths when n lt 2 displaystyle n lt sqrt 2 nbsp Even earlier than Bravais the Italian scientist F Venturi experimented with pointed water filled prisms to demonstrate the circumzenithal arc 22 23 However this explanation was replaced later by the CZA s correct explanation by Bravais 17 nbsp Artificial Halo projected on a spherical screen 24 25 Visible are Tangential arcs Parry arcs sub parhelia parhelic circle heliac arcsArtificial ice crystals have been employed to create halos which are otherwise unattainable in the mechanical approach via the use of glass crystals e g circumzenithal and circumhorizontal arcs 26 The use of ice crystals ensures that the generated halos have the same angular coordinates as the natural phenomena Other crystals such as sodium fluoride NaF also have a refractive index close to ice and have been used in the past 27 Two axes edit In order to produce artificial halos such as the tangent arcs or the circumscribed halo one should rotate a single columnar hexagonal crystal about 2 axes Similarly the Lowitz arcs can be created by rotating a single plate crystal about two axes This can be done by engineered halo machines The first such machine was constructed in 2003 28 several more followed 25 29 Putting such machines inside spherical projection screens and by the principle of the so called sky transform 30 the analogy is nearly perfect A realization using micro versions of the aforementioned machines produces authentic distortion free projections of such complex artificial halos 9 24 25 Finally superposition of several images and projections produced by such halo machines may be combined to create a single image The resulting superposition image is then a representation of complex natural halo displays containing many different orientation sets of ice prisms 24 25 Three axes edit The experimental reproduction of circular halos is the most difficult using a single crystal only while it is the simplest and typically achieved one using chemical recipes Using a single crystal one needs to realize all possible 3D orientations of the crystal This has recently been achieved by two approaches The first one using pneumatics and a sophisticated rigging 29 and a second one using an Arduino based random walk machine which stochastically reorients a crystal embedded in a transparent thin walled sphere 21 Gallery edit nbsp 360 degree panorama of a parhelic circle and several other halos in Madrid on March 25 2017 nbsp Solar halo at the Alta Ski Area near the Snowpine lift on February 12 2023 nbsp Long exposure of a night time lunar halo display including an upper tangent arc 22 halo and paraselenic circle nbsp A circumscribed halo outer ring partially visible on the bottom left and top left right together with a 22 halo inner ring nbsp Sun pillar in San Francisco nbsp 22 halo around the Sun above PT Semen Padang building at Padang Indonesia October 2 2009 at 11 09 am nbsp Atmospheric temperatures responsible for ice crystals around 22 halo as viewed through a thermal camera C The halo itself is not present in the thermal spectrum The Sun is partially visible at the top of the image nbsp Complex halo display 22 halo sun dogs upper tangent arc upper and lower Sun pillar parhelic circle supralateral arc observed in Les Menuires elevation 2200 metres Rhone Alpes France on January 23 2015 during sunset at 16 30 nbsp Sun with Sun dogs at Hoherodskopf Germany July 15 2017 nbsp A circumscribed halo outer ring together with a comparatively rare 9 halo inner ring caused by pyramidal ice crystals Midsland the Netherlands 2019 nbsp 22 halo around the Sun above VBHC Serene Town at Bangalore India on May 24 2021 at 12 15 pm nbsp Solar halo at Cedar Key Florida US on November 1 2021 about 15 26 EST nbsp Halo around the Sun in Buenos Aires Argentina December 10 2022 nbsp Sun pillar and upper tangent arc over the San Francisco bay April 9 2023 nbsp 22 lunar halo behind coconut tree in Chikmagaluru on May 24 2021 nbsp Halo around the Sun in Coimbatore Tamil Nadu India 25 September 2023 11 45 AM nbsp Moon with 22 halo over New York City USA on November 30 2020 at 01 16 28 AM ESTSee also edit22 halo Atmospheric optical phenomenon 46 halo Atmospheric optical phenomenon 120 parhelion Anthelion Rare optical phenomenon Atmospheric optics Study of the optical characteristics of the atmosphere or products of atmospheric processes Circumhorizontal arc Optical phenomenon Circumscribed halo Optical phenomenon Circumzenithal arc Optical phenomenon arising from refraction of sunlight through ice crystals Corona Optical phenomenon of the sky Diamond dust Ground level cloud of ice crystals False sunrise Atmospheric optical phenomena in which the Sun appears to have risen Glory Optical phenomenon that resembles an iconic saint s halo about the shadow of the observer s head Green flash Meteorological optical phenomenon Heiligenschein Optical phenomenon Infralateral arc Kern arc atmospheric optical phenomenonPages displaying wikidata descriptions as a fallback Light pillar Reflections of a light source created by ice crystals in the air Liljequist parhelion Atmospheric optical phenomenon Parhelic circle Type of halo an optical phenomenon Parry arc Optical phenomenon Rainbow Meteorological phenomenon Subhelic arc Rare halo Subparhelic circle Subsun Glowing spot that can be seen within clouds or haze when observed from above Sun dog Atmospheric optical phenomenon Supralateral arc halo that appears as a large faintly rainbow colored band in a wide arc above the sun at about twice the distance as the 22 haloPages displaying wikidata descriptions as a fallback Tangent arc Atmospheric optical phemonenonReferences edit halo The American Heritage Dictionary of the English Language 5th ed HarperCollins Ping Yu Ho Needham Joseph 1959 Ancient Chinese Observations of Solar Haloes and Parhelia Weather 14 4 Wiley 124 134 Bibcode 1959Wthr 14 124P doi 10 1002 j 1477 8696 1959 tb02450 x ISSN 0043 1656 Disk with a hole in the sky Atmospheric Optics Retrieved 3 August 2016 Les Cowley Bottlinger s Rings Atmospheric Optics Retrieved 2017 06 26 Nance Robert Morton Pool P A S 1963 A Glossary of Cornish Sea Words Cornwall Federation of Old Cornwall Societies p 61 Nepal skies graced with extraordinary circular rainbow halo around sun The Himalayan Times 9 July 2015 Retrieved 3 August 2016 Cowley Les Schroeder Michael HaloSim3 atoptics co uk HaloPoint 2 0 saunalahti fi Archived from the original on 2016 10 07 a b c d Selmke Markus Selmke Sarah 2017 Artificial circumzenithal and circumhorizontal arcs American Journal of Physics 85 8 American Association of Physics Teachers 575 581 arXiv 1608 08664 Bibcode 2017AmJPh 85 575S doi 10 1119 1 4984802 ISSN 0002 9505 S2CID 118613833 a b Experiment No 94 Gilbert light experiments for boys 1920 p 98 via archive org Experiments photonicsdesign jimdofree com Cornu A 1889 Sur la reproduction artificielle des halos et des cercles parheliques Comtes Rendus Ac Paris in French 108 429 433 a b Vollmer Michael Tammer Robert 1998 03 20 Laboratory experiments in atmospheric optics Applied Optics 37 9 The Optical Society 1557 1568 Bibcode 1998ApOpt 37 1557V doi 10 1364 ao 37 001557 ISSN 0003 6935 PMID 18268748 Gislen Lars Mattsson Jan O 2007 10 16 Tabletop divergent light halos Physics Education 42 6 IOP Publishing 579 584 Bibcode 2007PhyEd 42 579G doi 10 1088 0031 9120 42 6 003 ISSN 0031 9120 S2CID 122261149 Ulanowski Zbigniew 2005 09 20 Ice analog halos Applied Optics 44 27 The Optical Society 5754 5758 Bibcode 2005ApOpt 44 5754U doi 10 1364 ao 44 005754 ISSN 0003 6935 PMID 16201438 de Beaumont M Elie 1869 Memoir of Auguste Bravais Washington DC Smithsonian Institution a b Memoire sur les halos et les phenomenes optiques qui les accompagnent J de l Ecole Royale Polytechnique in French 31 18 XXIV Reproduction artificielle des phenomenes optiques dus a des prismes a axe vertical Figures PL I Fig 48 PL II Fig 49 54 1 270 1847 a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a CS1 maint location link Wegner A 1917 Die Nebensonnen unter dem Horizont Meteorol Z in German 34 52 8 9 295 298 Homogenizing Light rods Light pipes edmundoptics com Borchardt Sarah Selmke Markus 2015 07 21 Intensity distribution of the parhelic circle and embedded parhelia at zero solar elevation theory and experiments Applied Optics 54 22 The Optical Society 6608 6615 Bibcode 2015ApOpt 54 6608B doi 10 1364 ao 54 006608 ISSN 0003 6935 PMID 26368071 S2CID 39382489 a b Selmke Markus 2015 Artificial halos American Journal of Physics 83 9 American Association of Physics Teachers 751 760 Bibcode 2015AmJPh 83 751S doi 10 1119 1 4923458 ISSN 0002 9505 Venturi F Commentarii sopra ottica Tav VIII Fig 17 p 219 arc PGQ Fig 27 p 213 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location link Gehler Johann Samuel Traugott 1829 Physikalisches Worterbuch neu bearbeitet von Brandes Gmelin Horner Muncke Pfaff in German E B Schwickert p 494 via archive org a b c Spherical projection screen for artificial halos BoredPanda com a b c d Selmke Markus Selmke Sarah 2016 Complex artificial halos for the classroom American Journal of Physics 84 7 American Association of Physics Teachers 561 564 Bibcode 2016AmJPh 84 561S doi 10 1119 1 4953342 ISSN 0002 9505 26 29 11 2015 Bozi Dar meteoros de Arbeitskreis Meteore e V 2015 Retrieved January 31 2024 Barkey B Liou K N Takano Y et al 1999 An Analog Light Scattering Experiment of Hexagonal Icelike Particles Part II Experimental and Theoretical Results Journal of the Atmospheric Sciences 56 Vollmer Michael Greenler Robert 2003 01 20 Halo and mirage demonstrations in atmospheric optics Applied Optics 42 3 The Optical Society 394 398 Bibcode 2003ApOpt 42 394V doi 10 1364 ao 42 000394 ISSN 0003 6935 PMID 12570259 a b Grossmann Michael Mollmann Klaus Peter Vollmer Michael 2014 12 15 Artificially generated halos rotating sample crystals around various axes Applied Optics 54 4 The Optical Society B97 106 doi 10 1364 ao 54 000b97 ISSN 1559 128X PMID 25967845 Sky Transform atoptics co uk External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Halo Halo explanations and image galleries at Atmospheric Optics Meteoros AKM Halo explanations and image galleries in German Halo reports of interesting halo observations around the World Southern Hemisphere Halo and other atmospheric phenomena Halo in Chisinau Moldova photo and video Walter Tape amp Jarmo Moilanen Atmospheric Halos and the Search for Angle x free e book Halo Phenomena Hyperphysics Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Halo optical phenomenon amp 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