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Atmospheric optics

Atmospheric optics is "the study of the optical characteristics of the atmosphere or products of atmospheric processes .... [including] temporal and spatial resolutions beyond those discernible with the naked eye".[1] Meteorological optics is "that part of atmospheric optics concerned with the study of patterns observable with the naked eye".[2] Nevertheless, the two terms are sometimes used interchangeably.

A colorful sky is often due to indirect sunlight being scattered off oxygen molecules and particulates, like smog, soot, and cloud droplets, as shown in this photo of a sunset during the October 2007 California wildfires.

Meteorological optical phenomena, as described in this article, are concerned with how the optical properties of Earth's atmosphere cause a wide range of optical phenomena and visual perception phenomena. Examples of meteorological phenomena include:

  • The blue color of the sky. This is from Rayleigh scattering, which redirects higher frequency/shorter wavelength (blue) sunlight back into the field of view of the observer.
  • The reddish color of the Sun when it is observed through a thick atmosphere, as during a sunrise or sunset. This is because red light is scattered less than blue light. The red light reaches the observer's eye, whereas the blue light is scattered out of the line of sight.
  • Other colours in the sky, such as glowing skies at dusk and dawn. These are from additional particulate matter in the sky that scatter different colors at different angles.
  • Halos, afterglows, coronas, and sun dogs. These are from scattering, or refraction, by ice crystals and from other particles in the atmosphere. They depend on different particle sizes and geometries.[3]
  • Mirages. These are optical phenomena in which light rays are bent due to thermal variations in the refractive index of air, producing displaced or heavily distorted images of distant objects. Other optical phenomena associated with this include the Novaya Zemlya effect, where the Sun appears to rise earlier or set later than predicted with a distorted shape. A spectacular form of refraction, called the Fata Morgana, occurs with a temperature inversion, in which objects on the horizon or even beyond the horizon (e.g. islands, cliffs, ships, and icebergs) appear elongated and elevated, like "fairy tale castles".[4]
  • Rainbows. These result from a combination of internal reflection and dispersive refraction of light in raindrops. Because rainbows are seen on the opposite side of the sky from the sun, rainbows are more visible the closer the sun is to the horizon. For example, if the sun is overhead, any possible rainbow appears near an observer's feet, making it hard to see, and involves very few raindrops between the observer's eyes and the ground, making any rainbow very sparse.[5]

Other phenomena that are remarkable because they are forms of visual illusions include:

History

A book on meteorological optics was published in the sixteenth century, but there have been numerous books on the subject since about 1950.[6] The topic was popularised by the wide circulation of a book by Marcel Minnaert, Light and Color in the Open Air, in 1954. [7][8]

Sun and Moon size

 
Comparison between the relative sizes of the Moon and a cloud at different points in the sky

In the Book of Optics (1011–22 AD), Ibn al-Haytham argued that vision occurs in the brain, and that personal experience has an effect on what people see and how they see, and that vision and perception are subjective. Arguing against Ptolemy's refraction theory for why people perceive the Sun and Moon larger at the horizon than when they are higher in the sky, he redefined the problem in terms of perceived, rather than real, enlargement. He said that judging the distance of an object depends on there being an uninterrupted sequence of intervening bodies between the object and the observer. With the Moon, however, there are no intervening objects. Therefore, since the size of an object depends on its observed distance, which is in this case inaccurate, the Moon appears larger on the horizon. Through works by Roger Bacon, John Pecham and Witelo based on Ibn al-Haytham's explanation, the Moon illusion gradually came to be accepted as a psychological phenomenon, with Ptolemy's theory being rejected in the 17th century.[9] For over 100 years, research on the Moon illusion has been conducted by vision scientists who invariably have been psychologists specializing in human perception. After reviewing the many different explanations in their 2002 book The Mystery of the Moon Illusion, Ross and Plug conclude "No single theory has emerged victorious".[10]

Sky coloration

 
When seen from a high altitude, as here from an airplane, the sky's color varies from pale to dark at elevations toward the zenith.

Light from the sky is a result of the Rayleigh scattering of sunlight, which results in a blue color perceived by the human eye. On a sunny day, Rayleigh scattering gives the sky a blue gradient, where it is darkest around the zenith and bright near the horizon. Light rays incoming from overhead encounters 138 of the air mass than those coming along a horizontal path encounter. Hence, fewer particles scatter the zenithal sunbeam, and thus the light remains a darker blue.[11] The blueness is at the horizon because the blue light coming from great distances is also preferentially scattered. This results in a red shift of the distant light sources that is compensated by the blue hue of the scattered light in the line of sight. In other words, the red light scatters also; if it does so at a point a great distance from the observer it has a much higher chance of reaching the observer than blue light. At distances nearing infinity, the scattered light is therefore white. Distant clouds or snowy mountaintops will seem yellow for that reason;[12] that effect is not obvious on clear days, but very pronounced when clouds are covering the line of sight reducing the blue hue from scattered sunlight.

The scattering due to molecule sized particles (as in air) is greater in the forward and backward directions than it is in the lateral direction.[13] Individual water droplets exposed to white light will create a set of colored rings. If a cloud is thick enough, scattering from multiple water droplets will wash out the set of colored rings and create a washed out white color.[14] Dust from the Sahara moves around the southern periphery of the subtropical ridge moves into the southeastern United States during the summer, which changes the sky from a blue to a white appearance and leads to an increase in red sunsets. Its presence negatively impacts air quality during the summer since it adds to the count of airborne particulates.[15]

 
Purple sky on the La Silla Observatory.[16]

The sky can turn a multitude of colors such as red, orange, pink and yellow (especially near sunset or sunrise) and black at night. Scattering effects also partially polarize light from the sky, most pronounced at an angle 90° from the sun.

Sky luminance distribution models have been recommended by the International Commission on Illumination (CIE) for the design of daylighting schemes. Recent developments relate to “all sky models” for modelling sky luminance under weather conditions ranging from clear sky to overcast.[17]

Cloud coloration

 
An occurrence of altocumulus and cirrocumulus cloud iridescence
 
Sunset reflecting shades of pink onto grey stratocumulus clouds.

The color of a cloud, as seen from the Earth, tells much about what is going on inside the cloud. Dense deep tropospheric clouds exhibit a high reflectance (70% to 95%) throughout the visible spectrum. Tiny particles of water are densely packed and sunlight cannot penetrate far into the cloud before it is reflected out, giving a cloud its characteristic white color, especially when viewed from the top.[18] Cloud droplets tend to scatter light efficiently, so that the intensity of the solar radiation decreases with depth into the gases. As a result, the cloud base can vary from a very light to very dark grey depending on the cloud's thickness and how much light is being reflected or transmitted back to the observer. Thin clouds may look white or appear to have acquired the color of their environment or background. High tropospheric and non-tropospheric clouds appear mostly white if composed entirely of ice crystals and/or supercooled water droplets.

As a tropospheric cloud matures, the dense water droplets may combine to produce larger droplets, which may combine to form droplets large enough to fall as rain. By this process of accumulation, the space between droplets becomes increasingly larger, permitting light to penetrate farther into the cloud. If the cloud is sufficiently large and the droplets within are spaced far enough apart, it may be that a percentage of the light which enters the cloud is not reflected back out before it is absorbed. A simple example of this is being able to see farther in heavy rain than in heavy fog. This process of reflection/absorption is what causes the range of cloud color from white to black.[19]

Other colors occur naturally in clouds. Bluish-grey is the result of light scattering within the cloud. In the visible spectrum, blue and green are at the short end of light's visible wavelengths, while red and yellow are at the long end.[20] The short rays are more easily scattered by water droplets, and the long rays are more likely to be absorbed. The bluish color is evidence that such scattering is being produced by rain-sized droplets in the cloud. A cumulonimbus cloud emitting green is a sign that it is a severe thunderstorm,[21] capable of heavy rain, hail, strong winds and possible tornadoes. The exact cause of green thunderstorms is still unknown, but it could be due to the combination of reddened sunlight passing through very optically thick clouds. Yellowish clouds may occur in the late spring through early fall months during forest fire season. The yellow color is due to the presence of pollutants in the smoke. Yellowish clouds caused by the presence of nitrogen dioxide are sometimes seen in urban areas with high air pollution levels.[22]

Red, orange and pink clouds occur almost entirely at sunrise and sunset and are the result of the scattering of sunlight by the atmosphere. When the angle between the sun and the horizon is less than 10 percent, as it is just after sunrise or just prior to sunset, sunlight becomes too red due to refraction for any colors other than those with a reddish hue to be seen.[21] The clouds do not become that color; they are reflecting long and unscattered rays of sunlight, which are predominant at those hours. The effect is much like if one were to shine a red spotlight on a white sheet. In combination with large, mature thunderheads this can produce blood-red clouds. Clouds look darker in the near-infrared because water absorbs solar radiation at those wavelengths.

Halos

 
A man in front of a complex halo display at the Amundsen-Scott South Pole Station.

A halo (ἅλως; also known as a nimbus, icebow or gloriole) is an optical phenomenon produced by the interaction of light from the sun or moon with ice crystals in the atmosphere, resulting in colored or white arcs, rings or spots in the sky.[23] Many halos are positioned near the sun or moon, but others are elsewhere and even in the opposite part of the sky. They can also form around artificial lights in very cold weather when ice crystals called diamond dust are floating in the nearby air.[24]

There are many types of ice halos. They are produced by the ice crystals in cirrus or cirrostratus clouds high in the upper troposphere, at an altitude of 5 kilometres (3.1 mi) to 10 kilometres (6.2 mi), or, during very cold weather, by ice crystals called diamond dust drifting in the air at low levels.[25][26][27] The particular shape and orientation of the crystals are responsible for the types 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 sunlight between their faces, sending shafts of light in particular directions.[23] For circular halos, the preferred angular distance are 22 and 46 degrees from the ice crystals which create them.[28] Atmospheric phenomena such as halos have been used as part of weather lore as an empirical means of weather forecasting, with their presence indicating an approach of a warm front and its associated rain.[29]

Sun dogs

 
Very bright sundogs in Fargo, North Dakota. Note the halo arcs passing through each sun dog.

Sun dogs are a common type of halo, with the appearance of two subtly-colored bright spots to the left and right of the sun, at a distance of about 22° and at the same elevation above the horizon. They are commonly caused by plate-shaped hexagonal ice crystals.[25][26] These crystals tend to become horizontally aligned as they sink through the air, causing them to refract the sunlight to the left and right, resulting in the two sun dogs.[26][25]

As the sun rises higher, the rays passing through the crystals are increasingly skewed from the horizontal plane. Their angle of deviation increases and the sundogs move further from the sun.[30] However, they always stay at the same elevation as the sun. Sun dogs are red-colored at the side nearest the sun. Farther out the colors grade to blue or violet.[25] However, the colors overlap considerably and so are muted, rarely pure or saturated. The colors of the sun dog finally merge into the white of the parhelic circle (if the latter is visible).

It is theoretically possible to predict the forms of sun dogs as would be seen on other planets and moons. Mars might have sundogs formed by both water-ice and CO2-ice. On the giant gas planets — Jupiter, Saturn, Uranus and Neptune — other crystals form the clouds of ammonia, methane, and other substances that can produce halos with four or more sundogs.[31]

Glory

 
Solar glory at the steam from a hot spring

A common optical phenomenon involving water droplets is the glory.[23] A glory is an optical phenomenon, appearing much like an iconic Saint's halo about the head of the observer, produced by light backscattered (a combination of diffraction, reflection and refraction) towards its source by a cloud of uniformly sized water droplets. A glory has multiple colored rings, with red colors on the outermost ring and blue/violet colors on the innermost ring.[32]

The angular distance is much smaller than a rainbow, ranging between 5° and 20°, depending on the size of the droplets. The glory can only be seen when the observer is directly between the sun and cloud of refracting water droplets. Hence, it is commonly observed while airborne, with the glory surrounding the airplane's shadow on clouds (this is often called The Glory of the Pilot). Glories can also be seen from mountains and tall buildings,[33] when there are clouds or fog below the level of the observer, or on days with ground fog. The glory is related to the optical phenomenon anthelion.

Rainbow

 
Double rainbow and supernumerary rainbows on the inside of the primary arc. The shadow of the photographer's head marks the centre of the rainbow circle (antisolar point).

A rainbow is an optical and meteorological phenomenon that causes a spectrum of light to appear in the sky when sunlight shines on to droplets of moisture in the Earth's atmosphere. It takes the form of a multicolored arc. Rainbows caused by sunlight always appear in the section of sky directly opposite the Sun, but originate no further than 42 degrees above the horizon for observers on the ground. To see them at higher angles, an observer would need to be in an airplane or near a mountaintop since the rainbow would otherwise be below the horizon. The bigger the droplets which formed the rainbow, the brighter it will be. Rainbows are most common near afternoon thunderstorms during the summer.[34]

A single reflection off the backs of an array of raindrops produces a rainbow with an angular size on the sky that ranges from 40° to 42° with red on the outside. Double rainbows are produced by two internal reflections with angular size of 50.5° to 54° with violet on the outside. Within the "primary rainbow" (the lowest, and also normally the brightest rainbow) the arc of a rainbow shows red on the outer (or upper) part of the arc, and violet on the inner section. This rainbow is caused by light being reflected once in droplets of water. In a double rainbow, a second arc may be seen above and outside the primary arc, and has the order of its colors reversed (red faces inward toward the other rainbow, in both rainbows). This second rainbow is caused by light reflecting twice inside water droplets.[34] The region between a double rainbow is dark. The reason for this dark band is that, while light below the primary rainbow comes from droplet reflection, and light above the upper (secondary) rainbow also comes from droplet reflection, there is no mechanism for the region between a double rainbow to show any light reflected from water drops, at all.

A rainbow spans a continuous spectrum of colors; the distinct bands (including the number of bands) are an artifact of human color vision, and no banding of any type is seen in a black-and-white photograph of a rainbow (only a smooth gradation of intensity to a maxima, then fading to a minima at the other side of the arc). For colors seen by a normal human eye, the most commonly cited and remembered sequence, in English, is Isaac Newton's sevenfold red, orange, yellow, green, blue, indigo and violet (popularly memorized by mnemonics like Roy G. Biv).[35]

Mirage

 
Various kinds of mirages in one location taken over the course of six minutes. The uppermost inset frame shows an inferior mirage of the Farallon Islands. The second inset frame shows a green flash on the left-hand side. The two lower frames and the main frame all show superior mirages of the Farallon Islands. In these three frames, the superior mirage evolves from a 3-image mirage to a 5-image mirage, and back to a 2-image mirage. Such a display is consistent with a Fata Morgana.

A mirage is a naturally occurring optical phenomenon in which light rays are bent to produce a displaced image of distant objects or the sky. The word comes to English via the French mirage, from the Latin mirare, meaning "to look at, to wonder at". This is the same root as for "mirror" and "to admire". Also, it has its roots in the Arabic mirage.

In contrast to a hallucination, a mirage is a real optical phenomenon which can be captured on camera, since light rays actually are refracted to form the false image at the observer's location. What the image appears to represent, however, is determined by the interpretive faculties of the human mind. For example, inferior images on land are very easily mistaken for the reflections from a small body of water.

Mirages can be categorized as "inferior" (meaning lower), "superior" (meaning higher) and "Fata Morgana", one kind of superior mirage consisting of a series of unusually elaborate, vertically stacked images, which form one rapidly changing mirage.

Green flashes and green rays are optical phenomena that occur shortly after sunset or before sunrise, when a green spot is visible, usually for no more than a second or two, above the sun, or a green ray shoots up from the sunset point. Green flashes are actually a group of phenomena stemming from different causes, and some are more common than others.[36] Green flashes can be observed from any altitude (even from an aircraft). They are usually seen at an unobstructed horizon, such as over the ocean, but are possible over cloud tops and mountain tops as well.

A green flash from the moon and bright planets at the horizon, including Venus and Jupiter, can also be observed.[37][38]

Fata Morgana

 
A Fata Morgana of a boat

This optical phenomenon occurs because rays of light are strongly bent when they pass through air layers of different temperatures in a steep thermal inversion where an atmospheric duct has formed.[39] A thermal inversion is an atmospheric condition where warmer air exists in a well-defined layer above a layer of significantly cooler air. This temperature inversion is the opposite of what is normally the case; air is usually warmer close to the surface, and cooler higher up. In calm weather, a layer of significantly warmer air can rest over colder dense air, forming an atmospheric duct which acts like a refracting lens, producing a series of both inverted and erect images.

A Fata Morgana is an unusual and very complex form of mirage, a form of superior mirage, which, like many other kinds of superior mirages, is seen in a narrow band right above the horizon. It is an Italian phrase derived from the vulgar Latin for "fairy" and the Arthurian sorcerer Morgan le Fay,[40] from a belief that the mirage, often seen in the Strait of Messina, were fairy castles in the air,[41] or false land designed to lure sailors to their death created by her witchcraft. Although the term Fata Morgana is sometimes incorrectly applied to other, more common kinds of mirages, the true Fata Morgana is not the same as an ordinary superior mirage, and is certainly not the same as an inferior mirage.

Fata Morgana mirages tremendously distort the object or objects which they are based on, such that the object often appears to be very unusual, and may even be transformed in such a way that it is completely unrecognizable. A Fata Morgana can be seen on land or at sea, in polar regions or in deserts. This kind of mirage can involve almost any kind of distant object, including such things as boats, islands, and coastline.

A Fata Morgana is not only complex, but also rapidly changing. The mirage comprises several inverted (upside down) and erect (right side up) images that are stacked on top of one another. Fata Morgana mirages also show alternating compressed and stretched zones.[39]

Novaya Zemlya effect

The Novaya Zemlya effect is a polar mirage caused by high refraction of sunlight between atmospheric thermoclines. The Novaya Zemlya effect will give the impression that the sun is rising earlier or setting later than it actually should (astronomically speaking).[42] Depending on the meteorological situation the effect will present the Sun as a line or a square (which is sometimes referred to as the "rectangular sun"), made up of flattened hourglass shapes. The mirage requires rays of sunlight to have an inversion layer for hundreds of kilometres, and depends on the inversion layer's temperature gradient. The sunlight must bend to the Earth's curvature at least 400 kilometres (250 mi) to allow an elevation rise of 5 degrees for sight of the sun disk.

The first person to record the phenomenon was Gerrit de Veer, a member of Willem Barentsz' ill-fated third expedition into the polar region. Novaya Zemlya, the archipelago where de Veer first observed the phenomenon, lends its name to the effect.[42]

Crepuscular rays

 
Crepuscular rays, taken in Taipei, Taiwan.

Crepuscular rays are near-parallel rays of sunlight moving through the Earth's atmosphere, but appear to diverge because of linear perspective.[43] They often occur when objects such as mountain peaks or clouds partially shadow the Sun's rays like a cloud cover. Various airborne compounds scatter the sunlight and make these rays visible, due to diffraction, reflection, and scattering.

Crepuscular rays can also occasionally be viewed underwater, particularly in arctic areas, appearing from ice shelves or cracks in the ice. Also they are also viewed in days when the sun hits the clouds in a perfect angle shining upon the area.

There are three primary forms of crepuscular rays[citation needed]:

  • Rays of light penetrating holes in low clouds (also called "Jacob's Ladder").
  • Beams of light diverging from behind a cloud.
  • Pale, pinkish or reddish rays that radiate from below the horizon. These are often mistaken for light pillars.

They are commonly seen near sunrise and sunset, when tall clouds such as cumulonimbus and mountains can be most effective at creating these rays.[citation needed]

Anticrepuscular rays

Anticrepuscular rays while parallel in reality are sometimes visible in the sky in the direction opposite the sun. They appear to converge again at the distant horizon.

Atmospheric refraction

 
Diagram showing displacement of the Sun's image at sunrise and sunset

Atmospheric refraction influences the apparent position of astronomical and terrestrial objects, usually causing them to appear higher than they actually are. For this reason navigators, astronomers, and surveyors observe positions when these effects are minimal. Sailors will only shoot a star when 20° or more above the horizon, astronomers try to schedule observations when an object is highest in the sky, and surveyors try to observe in the afternoon when refraction is minimum.

Atmospheric diffraction

Atmospheric diffraction is a visual effect caused when sunlight is bent by particles suspended in the air.

List

See also

References

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atmospheric, optics, study, optical, characteristics, atmosphere, products, atmospheric, processes, including, temporal, spatial, resolutions, beyond, those, discernible, with, naked, meteorological, optics, that, part, atmospheric, optics, concerned, with, st. Atmospheric optics is the study of the optical characteristics of the atmosphere or products of atmospheric processes including temporal and spatial resolutions beyond those discernible with the naked eye 1 Meteorological optics is that part of atmospheric optics concerned with the study of patterns observable with the naked eye 2 Nevertheless the two terms are sometimes used interchangeably A colorful sky is often due to indirect sunlight being scattered off oxygen molecules and particulates like smog soot and cloud droplets as shown in this photo of a sunset during the October 2007 California wildfires Meteorological optical phenomena as described in this article are concerned with how the optical properties of Earth s atmosphere cause a wide range of optical phenomena and visual perception phenomena Examples of meteorological phenomena include The blue color of the sky This is from Rayleigh scattering which redirects higher frequency shorter wavelength blue sunlight back into the field of view of the observer The reddish color of the Sun when it is observed through a thick atmosphere as during a sunrise or sunset This is because red light is scattered less than blue light The red light reaches the observer s eye whereas the blue light is scattered out of the line of sight Other colours in the sky such as glowing skies at dusk and dawn These are from additional particulate matter in the sky that scatter different colors at different angles Halos afterglows coronas and sun dogs These are from scattering or refraction by ice crystals and from other particles in the atmosphere They depend on different particle sizes and geometries 3 Mirages These are optical phenomena in which light rays are bent due to thermal variations in the refractive index of air producing displaced or heavily distorted images of distant objects Other optical phenomena associated with this include the Novaya Zemlya effect where the Sun appears to rise earlier or set later than predicted with a distorted shape A spectacular form of refraction called the Fata Morgana occurs with a temperature inversion in which objects on the horizon or even beyond the horizon e g islands cliffs ships and icebergs appear elongated and elevated like fairy tale castles 4 Rainbows These result from a combination of internal reflection and dispersive refraction of light in raindrops Because rainbows are seen on the opposite side of the sky from the sun rainbows are more visible the closer the sun is to the horizon For example if the sun is overhead any possible rainbow appears near an observer s feet making it hard to see and involves very few raindrops between the observer s eyes and the ground making any rainbow very sparse 5 Other phenomena that are remarkable because they are forms of visual illusions include Crepuscular rays Anticrepuscular rays and The apparent size of celestial objects such as the Sun and Moon Contents 1 History 2 Sun and Moon size 3 Sky coloration 4 Cloud coloration 5 Halos 5 1 Sun dogs 6 Glory 7 Rainbow 8 Mirage 8 1 Fata Morgana 8 2 Novaya Zemlya effect 9 Crepuscular rays 9 1 Anticrepuscular rays 10 Atmospheric refraction 11 Atmospheric diffraction 12 List 13 See also 14 ReferencesHistory EditA book on meteorological optics was published in the sixteenth century but there have been numerous books on the subject since about 1950 6 The topic was popularised by the wide circulation of a book by Marcel Minnaert Light and Color in the Open Air in 1954 7 8 Sun and Moon size Edit Comparison between the relative sizes of the Moon and a cloud at different points in the sky Main article Moon illusion In the Book of Optics 1011 22 AD Ibn al Haytham argued that vision occurs in the brain and that personal experience has an effect on what people see and how they see and that vision and perception are subjective Arguing against Ptolemy s refraction theory for why people perceive the Sun and Moon larger at the horizon than when they are higher in the sky he redefined the problem in terms of perceived rather than real enlargement He said that judging the distance of an object depends on there being an uninterrupted sequence of intervening bodies between the object and the observer With the Moon however there are no intervening objects Therefore since the size of an object depends on its observed distance which is in this case inaccurate the Moon appears larger on the horizon Through works by Roger Bacon John Pecham and Witelo based on Ibn al Haytham s explanation the Moon illusion gradually came to be accepted as a psychological phenomenon with Ptolemy s theory being rejected in the 17th century 9 For over 100 years research on the Moon illusion has been conducted by vision scientists who invariably have been psychologists specializing in human perception After reviewing the many different explanations in their 2002 book The Mystery of the Moon Illusion Ross and Plug conclude No single theory has emerged victorious 10 Sky coloration EditMain article Diffuse sky radiation When seen from a high altitude as here from an airplane the sky s color varies from pale to dark at elevations toward the zenith Light from the sky is a result of the Rayleigh scattering of sunlight which results in a blue color perceived by the human eye On a sunny day Rayleigh scattering gives the sky a blue gradient where it is darkest around the zenith and bright near the horizon Light rays incoming from overhead encounters 1 38 of the air mass than those coming along a horizontal path encounter Hence fewer particles scatter the zenithal sunbeam and thus the light remains a darker blue 11 The blueness is at the horizon because the blue light coming from great distances is also preferentially scattered This results in a red shift of the distant light sources that is compensated by the blue hue of the scattered light in the line of sight In other words the red light scatters also if it does so at a point a great distance from the observer it has a much higher chance of reaching the observer than blue light At distances nearing infinity the scattered light is therefore white Distant clouds or snowy mountaintops will seem yellow for that reason 12 that effect is not obvious on clear days but very pronounced when clouds are covering the line of sight reducing the blue hue from scattered sunlight The scattering due to molecule sized particles as in air is greater in the forward and backward directions than it is in the lateral direction 13 Individual water droplets exposed to white light will create a set of colored rings If a cloud is thick enough scattering from multiple water droplets will wash out the set of colored rings and create a washed out white color 14 Dust from the Sahara moves around the southern periphery of the subtropical ridge moves into the southeastern United States during the summer which changes the sky from a blue to a white appearance and leads to an increase in red sunsets Its presence negatively impacts air quality during the summer since it adds to the count of airborne particulates 15 Purple sky on the La Silla Observatory 16 The sky can turn a multitude of colors such as red orange pink and yellow especially near sunset or sunrise and black at night Scattering effects also partially polarize light from the sky most pronounced at an angle 90 from the sun Sky luminance distribution models have been recommended by the International Commission on Illumination CIE for the design of daylighting schemes Recent developments relate to all sky models for modelling sky luminance under weather conditions ranging from clear sky to overcast 17 Cloud coloration EditSee also Cloud An occurrence of altocumulus and cirrocumulus cloud iridescence Sunset reflecting shades of pink onto grey stratocumulus clouds The color of a cloud as seen from the Earth tells much about what is going on inside the cloud Dense deep tropospheric clouds exhibit a high reflectance 70 to 95 throughout the visible spectrum Tiny particles of water are densely packed and sunlight cannot penetrate far into the cloud before it is reflected out giving a cloud its characteristic white color especially when viewed from the top 18 Cloud droplets tend to scatter light efficiently so that the intensity of the solar radiation decreases with depth into the gases As a result the cloud base can vary from a very light to very dark grey depending on the cloud s thickness and how much light is being reflected or transmitted back to the observer Thin clouds may look white or appear to have acquired the color of their environment or background High tropospheric and non tropospheric clouds appear mostly white if composed entirely of ice crystals and or supercooled water droplets As a tropospheric cloud matures the dense water droplets may combine to produce larger droplets which may combine to form droplets large enough to fall as rain By this process of accumulation the space between droplets becomes increasingly larger permitting light to penetrate farther into the cloud If the cloud is sufficiently large and the droplets within are spaced far enough apart it may be that a percentage of the light which enters the cloud is not reflected back out before it is absorbed A simple example of this is being able to see farther in heavy rain than in heavy fog This process of reflection absorption is what causes the range of cloud color from white to black 19 Other colors occur naturally in clouds Bluish grey is the result of light scattering within the cloud In the visible spectrum blue and green are at the short end of light s visible wavelengths while red and yellow are at the long end 20 The short rays are more easily scattered by water droplets and the long rays are more likely to be absorbed The bluish color is evidence that such scattering is being produced by rain sized droplets in the cloud A cumulonimbus cloud emitting green is a sign that it is a severe thunderstorm 21 capable of heavy rain hail strong winds and possible tornadoes The exact cause of green thunderstorms is still unknown but it could be due to the combination of reddened sunlight passing through very optically thick clouds Yellowish clouds may occur in the late spring through early fall months during forest fire season The yellow color is due to the presence of pollutants in the smoke Yellowish clouds caused by the presence of nitrogen dioxide are sometimes seen in urban areas with high air pollution levels 22 Red orange and pink clouds occur almost entirely at sunrise and sunset and are the result of the scattering of sunlight by the atmosphere When the angle between the sun and the horizon is less than 10 percent as it is just after sunrise or just prior to sunset sunlight becomes too red due to refraction for any colors other than those with a reddish hue to be seen 21 The clouds do not become that color they are reflecting long and unscattered rays of sunlight which are predominant at those hours The effect is much like if one were to shine a red spotlight on a white sheet In combination with large mature thunderheads this can produce blood red clouds Clouds look darker in the near infrared because water absorbs solar radiation at those wavelengths Halos EditMain article Halo optical phenomenon A man in front of a complex halo display at the Amundsen Scott South Pole Station A halo ἅlws also known as a nimbus icebow or gloriole is an optical phenomenon produced by the interaction of light from the sun or moon with ice crystals in the atmosphere resulting in colored or white arcs rings or spots in the sky 23 Many halos are positioned near the sun or moon but others are elsewhere and even in the opposite part of the sky They can also form around artificial lights in very cold weather when ice crystals called diamond dust are floating in the nearby air 24 There are many types of ice halos They are produced by the ice crystals in cirrus or cirrostratus clouds high in the upper troposphere at an altitude of 5 kilometres 3 1 mi to 10 kilometres 6 2 mi or during very cold weather by ice crystals called diamond dust drifting in the air at low levels 25 26 27 The particular shape and orientation of the crystals are responsible for the types 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 sunlight between their faces sending shafts of light in particular directions 23 For circular halos the preferred angular distance are 22 and 46 degrees from the ice crystals which create them 28 Atmospheric phenomena such as halos have been used as part of weather lore as an empirical means of weather forecasting with their presence indicating an approach of a warm front and its associated rain 29 Sun dogs Edit Very bright sundogs in Fargo North Dakota Note the halo arcs passing through each sun dog Main article Sun dogs Sun dogs are a common type of halo with the appearance of two subtly colored bright spots to the left and right of the sun at a distance of about 22 and at the same elevation above the horizon They are commonly caused by plate shaped hexagonal ice crystals 25 26 These crystals tend to become horizontally aligned as they sink through the air causing them to refract the sunlight to the left and right resulting in the two sun dogs 26 25 As the sun rises higher the rays passing through the crystals are increasingly skewed from the horizontal plane Their angle of deviation increases and the sundogs move further from the sun 30 However they always stay at the same elevation as the sun Sun dogs are red colored at the side nearest the sun Farther out the colors grade to blue or violet 25 However the colors overlap considerably and so are muted rarely pure or saturated The colors of the sun dog finally merge into the white of the parhelic circle if the latter is visible It is theoretically possible to predict the forms of sun dogs as would be seen on other planets and moons Mars might have sundogs formed by both water ice and CO2 ice On the giant gas planets Jupiter Saturn Uranus and Neptune other crystals form the clouds of ammonia methane and other substances that can produce halos with four or more sundogs 31 Glory Edit Solar glory at the steam from a hot spring Main article Glory optical phenomenon A common optical phenomenon involving water droplets is the glory 23 A glory is an optical phenomenon appearing much like an iconic Saint s halo about the head of the observer produced by light backscattered a combination of diffraction reflection and refraction towards its source by a cloud of uniformly sized water droplets A glory has multiple colored rings with red colors on the outermost ring and blue violet colors on the innermost ring 32 The angular distance is much smaller than a rainbow ranging between 5 and 20 depending on the size of the droplets The glory can only be seen when the observer is directly between the sun and cloud of refracting water droplets Hence it is commonly observed while airborne with the glory surrounding the airplane s shadow on clouds this is often called The Glory of the Pilot Glories can also be seen from mountains and tall buildings 33 when there are clouds or fog below the level of the observer or on days with ground fog The glory is related to the optical phenomenon anthelion Rainbow EditMain article Rainbow Double rainbow and supernumerary rainbows on the inside of the primary arc The shadow of the photographer s head marks the centre of the rainbow circle antisolar point A rainbow is an optical and meteorological phenomenon that causes a spectrum of light to appear in the sky when sunlight shines on to droplets of moisture in the Earth s atmosphere It takes the form of a multicolored arc Rainbows caused by sunlight always appear in the section of sky directly opposite the Sun but originate no further than 42 degrees above the horizon for observers on the ground To see them at higher angles an observer would need to be in an airplane or near a mountaintop since the rainbow would otherwise be below the horizon The bigger the droplets which formed the rainbow the brighter it will be Rainbows are most common near afternoon thunderstorms during the summer 34 A single reflection off the backs of an array of raindrops produces a rainbow with an angular size on the sky that ranges from 40 to 42 with red on the outside Double rainbows are produced by two internal reflections with angular size of 50 5 to 54 with violet on the outside Within the primary rainbow the lowest and also normally the brightest rainbow the arc of a rainbow shows red on the outer or upper part of the arc and violet on the inner section This rainbow is caused by light being reflected once in droplets of water In a double rainbow a second arc may be seen above and outside the primary arc and has the order of its colors reversed red faces inward toward the other rainbow in both rainbows This second rainbow is caused by light reflecting twice inside water droplets 34 The region between a double rainbow is dark The reason for this dark band is that while light below the primary rainbow comes from droplet reflection and light above the upper secondary rainbow also comes from droplet reflection there is no mechanism for the region between a double rainbow to show any light reflected from water drops at all A rainbow spans a continuous spectrum of colors the distinct bands including the number of bands are an artifact of human color vision and no banding of any type is seen in a black and white photograph of a rainbow only a smooth gradation of intensity to a maxima then fading to a minima at the other side of the arc For colors seen by a normal human eye the most commonly cited and remembered sequence in English is Isaac Newton s sevenfold red orange yellow green blue indigo and violet popularly memorized by mnemonics like Roy G Biv 35 Mirage EditMain articles Green flash and Mirage Various kinds of mirages in one location taken over the course of six minutes The uppermost inset frame shows an inferior mirage of the Farallon Islands The second inset frame shows a green flash on the left hand side The two lower frames and the main frame all show superior mirages of the Farallon Islands In these three frames the superior mirage evolves from a 3 image mirage to a 5 image mirage and back to a 2 image mirage Such a display is consistent with a Fata Morgana A mirage is a naturally occurring optical phenomenon in which light rays are bent to produce a displaced image of distant objects or the sky The word comes to English via the French mirage from the Latin mirare meaning to look at to wonder at This is the same root as for mirror and to admire Also it has its roots in the Arabic mirage In contrast to a hallucination a mirage is a real optical phenomenon which can be captured on camera since light rays actually are refracted to form the false image at the observer s location What the image appears to represent however is determined by the interpretive faculties of the human mind For example inferior images on land are very easily mistaken for the reflections from a small body of water Mirages can be categorized as inferior meaning lower superior meaning higher and Fata Morgana one kind of superior mirage consisting of a series of unusually elaborate vertically stacked images which form one rapidly changing mirage Green flashes and green rays are optical phenomena that occur shortly after sunset or before sunrise when a green spot is visible usually for no more than a second or two above the sun or a green ray shoots up from the sunset point Green flashes are actually a group of phenomena stemming from different causes and some are more common than others 36 Green flashes can be observed from any altitude even from an aircraft They are usually seen at an unobstructed horizon such as over the ocean but are possible over cloud tops and mountain tops as well A green flash from the moon and bright planets at the horizon including Venus and Jupiter can also be observed 37 38 Fata Morgana Edit A Fata Morgana of a boat Main article Fata Morgana mirage This optical phenomenon occurs because rays of light are strongly bent when they pass through air layers of different temperatures in a steep thermal inversion where an atmospheric duct has formed 39 A thermal inversion is an atmospheric condition where warmer air exists in a well defined layer above a layer of significantly cooler air This temperature inversion is the opposite of what is normally the case air is usually warmer close to the surface and cooler higher up In calm weather a layer of significantly warmer air can rest over colder dense air forming an atmospheric duct which acts like a refracting lens producing a series of both inverted and erect images A Fata Morgana is an unusual and very complex form of mirage a form of superior mirage which like many other kinds of superior mirages is seen in a narrow band right above the horizon It is an Italian phrase derived from the vulgar Latin for fairy and the Arthurian sorcerer Morgan le Fay 40 from a belief that the mirage often seen in the Strait of Messina were fairy castles in the air 41 or false land designed to lure sailors to their death created by her witchcraft Although the term Fata Morgana is sometimes incorrectly applied to other more common kinds of mirages the true Fata Morgana is not the same as an ordinary superior mirage and is certainly not the same as an inferior mirage Fata Morgana mirages tremendously distort the object or objects which they are based on such that the object often appears to be very unusual and may even be transformed in such a way that it is completely unrecognizable A Fata Morgana can be seen on land or at sea in polar regions or in deserts This kind of mirage can involve almost any kind of distant object including such things as boats islands and coastline A Fata Morgana is not only complex but also rapidly changing The mirage comprises several inverted upside down and erect right side up images that are stacked on top of one another Fata Morgana mirages also show alternating compressed and stretched zones 39 Novaya Zemlya effect Edit Main article Novaya Zemlya effect The Novaya Zemlya effect is a polar mirage caused by high refraction of sunlight between atmospheric thermoclines The Novaya Zemlya effect will give the impression that the sun is rising earlier or setting later than it actually should astronomically speaking 42 Depending on the meteorological situation the effect will present the Sun as a line or a square which is sometimes referred to as the rectangular sun made up of flattened hourglass shapes The mirage requires rays of sunlight to have an inversion layer for hundreds of kilometres and depends on the inversion layer s temperature gradient The sunlight must bend to the Earth s curvature at least 400 kilometres 250 mi to allow an elevation rise of 5 degrees for sight of the sun disk The first person to record the phenomenon was Gerrit de Veer a member of Willem Barentsz ill fated third expedition into the polar region Novaya Zemlya the archipelago where de Veer first observed the phenomenon lends its name to the effect 42 Crepuscular rays Edit Crepuscular rays taken in Taipei Taiwan Main article Crepuscular rays Crepuscular rays are near parallel rays of sunlight moving through the Earth s atmosphere but appear to diverge because of linear perspective 43 They often occur when objects such as mountain peaks or clouds partially shadow the Sun s rays like a cloud cover Various airborne compounds scatter the sunlight and make these rays visible due to diffraction reflection and scattering Crepuscular rays can also occasionally be viewed underwater particularly in arctic areas appearing from ice shelves or cracks in the ice Also they are also viewed in days when the sun hits the clouds in a perfect angle shining upon the area There are three primary forms of crepuscular rays citation needed Rays of light penetrating holes in low clouds also called Jacob s Ladder Beams of light diverging from behind a cloud Pale pinkish or reddish rays that radiate from below the horizon These are often mistaken for light pillars They are commonly seen near sunrise and sunset when tall clouds such as cumulonimbus and mountains can be most effective at creating these rays citation needed Anticrepuscular rays Edit Main article Anticrepuscular rays Anticrepuscular rays while parallel in reality are sometimes visible in the sky in the direction opposite the sun They appear to converge again at the distant horizon Atmospheric refraction Edit Diagram showing displacement of the Sun s image at sunrise and sunset Main article Atmospheric refraction Atmospheric refraction influences the apparent position of astronomical and terrestrial objects usually causing them to appear higher than they actually are For this reason navigators astronomers and surveyors observe positions when these effects are minimal Sailors will only shoot a star when 20 or more above the horizon astronomers try to schedule observations when an object is highest in the sky and surveyors try to observe in the afternoon when refraction is minimum Atmospheric diffraction EditAtmospheric diffraction is a visual effect caused when sunlight is bent by particles suspended in the air Main article Atmospheric diffraction This article should include a summary of Atmospheric diffraction See Wikipedia Summary style for information on how to incorporate it into this article s main text November 2014 List EditSee also Optical phenomena List Afterglow Airglow Alexander s band the dark region between the two bows of a double rainbow Alpenglow Anticrepuscular rays Anthelion Auroral light northern and southern lights aurora borealis and aurora australis Belt of Venus Brocken Spectre Circumhorizontal arc Circumzenithal arc Cloud iridescence Crepuscular rays Earth s shadow Earthquake lights Glories Green flash Halos of Sun or Moon including sun dogs Heiligenschein or halo effect partly caused by the opposition effect Light pillar Lightning Mirages including Fata Morgana Nacreous cloud Polar stratospheric cloud Rainbows Subsun Sun dogs Tyndall effect Upper atmospheric lightning including red sprites Blue jets and ELVESSee also EditAlpenglow Nacreous cloud Noctilucent cloud Sunset Colors Sunrise ColorsReferences Edit Atmospheric optics AMS Glossary Meteorological optics AMS Glossary C D Ahrens 1994 Meteorology Today an introduction to weather climate and the environment 5th ed West Publishing Company pp 88 89 ISBN 978 0 314 02779 5 A Young An Introduction to Mirages H D Young 1992 34 University Physics 8e Addison Wesley ISBN 978 0 201 52981 4 Meteorological optics Open Library Livingston W C 1980 Marcel Minnaert and optics in nature Applied Optics 19 5 648 649 Bibcode 1980ApOpt 19 648L doi 10 1364 AO 19 000648 Greenler Robert Lynch David K 2011 Light and Color in Nature A Return to Optics Roots Optics and Photonics News 22 9 30 37 doi 10 1364 OPN 22 9 000030 Maurice Hershenson 1989 The Moon illusion Psychology Press ISBN 978 0 8058 0121 7 Helen Ross Cornelis Plug 2002 The Mystery of The Moon Illusion Oxford University Press USA Page 180 Why is the sky bluer on top than at the horizon Archived April 22 2011 at the Wayback Machine David K Lynch William Charles Livingston 2001 Color and light in nature Cambridge University Press p 31 ISBN 978 0 521 77504 5 Yu Timofeev and A V Vasilʹev 2008 Theoretical Fundamentals of Atmospheric Optics Cambridge International Science Publishing p 174 ISBN 978 1 904602 25 5 Craig F Bohren and Eugene Edmund Clothiaux 2006 Fundamentals of atmospheric radiation an introduction with 400 problems Fundamentals of Atmospheric Radiation An Introduction with 400 Problems by Craig F Bohren and Eugene Clothiaux Wiley Wiley VCH p 427 Bibcode 2006fari book B ISBN 978 3 527 40503 9 Science Daily African Dust Called A Major Factor Affecting Southeast U S Air Quality Retrieved on 2007 06 10 Three Pillars of Astronomy Retrieved 11 January 2016 eSim 2008 May 20th 22nd 2008 General Sky Standard Defining Luminance Distributions Archived April 22 2011 at the Wayback Machine Increasing Cloud Reflectivity Archived April 2 2015 at the Wayback Machine Royal Geographical Society 2010 Bette Hileman 1995 Clouds absorb more solar radiation than previously thought Chem Eng News 73 7 33 doi 10 1021 cen v073n007 p033 Atmospheric Science Data Center 2007 09 28 What Wavelength Goes With a Color National Aeronautics and Space Administration Archived from the original on 2011 07 20 Retrieved 2011 03 28 a b Frank W Gallagher III October 2000 Distant Green Thunderstorms Frazer s Theory Revisited Journal of Applied Meteorology 39 10 1754 1757 Bibcode 2000JApMe 39 1754G doi 10 1175 1520 0450 39 10 1754 Garrett Nagle 1998 10 Cities and Air Pollution Hazards Nelson Thornes pp 101 ISBN 978 0 17 490022 1 a b c William Thomas Brande and Joseph Cauvin 1842 A dictionary of science literature amp art comprising the history description and all the terms in general use Longman Brown Green and Longmans p 540 Storm Dunlop 2003 The weather identification handbook Globe Pequot p 118 ISBN 978 1 58574 857 0 a b c d Lee M Grenci and Jon M Nese 2001 A world of weather fundamentals of meteorology a text laboratory manual Kendall Hunt p 330 ISBN 978 0 7872 7716 1 a b c Devaraj Singh 2010 Fundamentals Of Optics PHI Learning Private Limited p 43 ISBN 978 81 203 4189 0 David K Lynch 2002 Cirrus Oxford University Press United States p 193 ISBN 978 0 19 513072 0 W and R Chambers 1874 Chambers encyclopaedia a dictionary of universal knowledge for the people Vol V W and R Chambers pp 206 207 Dennis Eskow March 1983 Make Your Own Weather Forecasts Popular Mechanics 159 3 148 Les Cowley 2009 08 02 Effect of solar altitude Atmospheric Optics Retrieved 2011 04 02 Les Cowley 2009 08 02 Other Worlds Atmospheric Optics Retrieved 2011 04 01 National Weather Service 2009 06 25 Glossary G National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration Retrieved 2011 04 12 Elizabeth A Wood 1975 Science From Your Airplane Window Courier Dover Publications p 70 ISBN 978 0 486 23205 8 a b Willis Isbister Milham 1912 Meteorology a text book on the weather the causes of its changes and weather forecasting for the student and general reader The Macmillan Company pp 449 450 Jeff Rennicke October 1995 The Sky Backpacker 23 8 55 59 Andrew T Young 2006 Green flashes at a glance San Diego State University Archived from the original on 5 February 2009 Retrieved 2009 03 05 C R Nave 2009 Red Sunset Green Flash Georgia State University HyperPhysics Archived from the original on 15 August 2010 Retrieved 2010 08 11 D J K O Connell 1958 The green flash and other low sun phenomena Castel Gandolfo Vatican Observatory Ricerche Astronomiche 4 7 Bibcode 1958RA 4 O a b An Introduction to Mirages by Andy Young Jan Dirk Blom 2009 A Dictionary of Hallucinations Springer p 189 ISBN 978 1 4419 1222 0 Cleveland Abbe October 1896 Atmospheric Refractions at the Surface of Water Monthly Weather Review 24 10 372 Bibcode 1896MWRv 24R 371 doi 10 1175 1520 0493 1896 24 371b ARATSO 2 0 CO 2 a b JaapJan Zeeberg 2001 Climate and glacial history of the Novaya Zemlya archipelago Russian Arctic with notes on the region s history of exploration JaapJan Zeeberg p 149 ISBN 978 90 5170 563 8 John A Day 2005 The Book of Clouds Sterling Publishing Company Inc pp 124 127 ISBN 978 1 4027 2813 6 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Atmospheric optics amp oldid 1120925932, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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