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#1
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This may be something different, but I saw this flying to Lake George two
weeks ago. I was about 1000' above the deck with the Sun high above me. My frontseat passenger keep saying a circular rainbow was following us and that the plane's shadow was in the middle of it. She took a picture of it that I thought would never show up. But it did. I have to get her to scan it. I told a friend of mine about it and he said that effect has a name. He found it on the web and sent me this link: http://www.touchingthelight.co.uk/features/brocken.htm Low and behold...that is what we saw. Kobra "Robert Lyons" wrote in message ... On a commercial flight recently, I saw a fascinating optical effect. I believe I understand what I saw, but would appreciate confirmation from experienced flyers out there. We were at cruising altitude, mid-trip. The air was clear, except for a thin haze layer below us, perhaps midway between the aircraft and the ground. Visible in that haze was an image of the sun, cast presumably by tiny lakes below us. Larger lakes didn't work - the cast reflection would get too large and out-of-focus. You all probably know about using pinhole viewers to see an eclipse. You may also know that you can view an eclipse with a fragment of a mirror, if it is small enough (or if you cover up most of a larger mirror, leaving a small hole). It will project a perfect image of the eclipsed sun on a convenient wall or floor. I'm pretty sure this is what I was seeing from the air, projected on that flat haze layer. My questions: 1) Has anyone else seen this effect? Is it well-known? 2) (the real question) has anyone seen it during an eclipse? Can you confirm that it gives you an eclipsed image? - Bo |
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#2
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"Kobra" wrote in message
... This may be something different, but I saw this flying to Lake George two weeks ago. I was about 1000' above the deck with the Sun high above me. My frontseat passenger keep saying a circular rainbow was following us and that the plane's shadow was in the middle of it. All rainbows are circular. It just happens that when you are standing on flat ground, you can't see the whole rainbow. Since the center of any rainbow (all of which are circular) is a point on a line projected from the light source through the viewer, the shadow of the viewer (an airplane in your case) will always be smack in the center of the rainbow, even if the viewer is moving. For more sunlight effects, just look at your shadow on the ground at any time during the day. Depending on the time of day and where your shadow is, you'll see a variety of effects. My two favorite ones are the bright spot with the shadow in the middle that you see on forested areas (due to the way the trees reflect the sunlight, the reflection is brightest where the sun is directly behind the viewer), and the moving blob of red you see when your shadow is passing over a large parking lot (the taillight reflectors reflect the sunlight back to you very brightly). I told a friend of mine about it and he said that effect has a name. He found it on the web and sent me this link: http://www.touchingthelight.co.uk/features/brocken.htm Low and behold...that is what we saw. If you saw that, I'd suggest you were flying too low. ![]() Seriously though, the effect described by the link you provided appears to be specifically restricted to human shadows atop a shadow of terrain (usually a peak), along with a rainbow. I wouldn't use the term they are using to describe the similar thing viewed from aloft in an airplane. Pete |
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#3
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Two weeks ago (Friday) we flew from NC to Saratoga Springs. My co-pilot
kept talking about the colors in the clouds. It was a sparkling CAVU day at 7500 feet over NJ and NY. I was too busy looking out the other side reliving past flights. I explained that the clouds below us were reflecting the fall colors on the ground. She insisted that it wasn't that and wen I looked, we had rainbow circles on each cloud as we passed. Quite beautiful. A fantastic day to fly. Now, who can explain the bright spot that our plane projects down sun? It's like a giant headlight and is particularly noticeable late in the day with the sun behind. "Kobra" wrote in message ... This may be something different, but I saw this flying to Lake George two weeks ago. I was about 1000' above the deck with the Sun high above me. My frontseat passenger keep saying a circular rainbow was following us and that the plane's shadow was in the middle of it. She took a picture of it that I thought would never show up. But it did. I have to get her to scan it. I told a friend of mine about it and he said that effect has a name. He found it on the web and sent me this link: http://www.touchingthelight.co.uk/features/brocken.htm Low and behold...that is what we saw. Kobra "Robert Lyons" wrote in message ... On a commercial flight recently, I saw a fascinating optical effect. I believe I understand what I saw, but would appreciate confirmation from experienced flyers out there. We were at cruising altitude, mid-trip. The air was clear, except for a thin haze layer below us, perhaps midway between the aircraft and the ground. Visible in that haze was an image of the sun, cast presumably by tiny lakes below us. Larger lakes didn't work - the cast reflection would get too large and out-of-focus. You all probably know about using pinhole viewers to see an eclipse. You may also know that you can view an eclipse with a fragment of a mirror, if it is small enough (or if you cover up most of a larger mirror, leaving a small hole). It will project a perfect image of the eclipsed sun on a convenient wall or floor. I'm pretty sure this is what I was seeing from the air, projected on that flat haze layer. My questions: 1) Has anyone else seen this effect? Is it well-known? 2) (the real question) has anyone seen it during an eclipse? Can you confirm that it gives you an eclipsed image? - Bo |
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#4
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"Maule Driver" wrote in message
. com... Now, who can explain the bright spot that our plane projects down sun? It's like a giant headlight and is particularly noticeable late in the day with the sun behind. See my other post. That "bright spot" is simply your position relative to a reflective surface. Your plane isn't projecting it. That just happens to be the spot where the sunlight is reflected by the greatest amount. Note that "reflective surface" doesn't have to be man-made. Trees, grass, shrubs, snow, sand, etc. are all reflective to some degree (just as you are reflective ).Pete |
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#5
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Maule Driver wrote:
Now, who can explain the bright spot that our plane projects down sun? It's like a giant headlight and is particularly noticeable late in the day with the sun behind. You may be describing the effect I saw, or you may be describing the effect that Peter Duniho already told you about: the point of highest reflectivity of the clouds. The difference is whether the image is an in-focus view of the sun (it'll be exactly the same apparent size as the sun, too) or whether it's a diffuse zone of brightness with no particular focus. The optical effect I'm asking about would be the in-focus sun image, and could not be seen when the deck is relatively solid, as it depends on light reflecting from a lake (i.e. on the *ground*, where most well-behaved lakes are found) and projecting onto a thin haze-layer. It probably also requires an inversion or some other mechanism of making a boundary to hold the thin haze layer. The effect Peter is describing (if I understand correctly) should be very common, basically visible whenever you are flying over the deck. It's the light of the sun, back-scattering off the clouds. The ground needn't be at all visible (better if it's not, in fact) and the 'glow' will be diffuse and un- focused. Now, you say it's "like a giant headlight" ... in focus, or not? - Bo |
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#6
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"Robert Lyons"
The effect Peter is describing (if I understand correctly) should be very common, basically visible whenever you are flying over the deck. It's the light of the sun, back-scattering off the clouds. The ground needn't be at all visible (better if it's not, in fact) and the 'glow' will be diffuse and un- focused. Actually I see it on the ground but it is diffuse and unfocused - like a very strong headlight shining on a very distant area. You just get a diffuse bright spot. I think I get Peter's concept and understand it but can't quite get it to 'intuit'. But makes some sense. Can't quite understand why the area on the ground where sunlight would reflect back at 180deg (or normal to the average surface) would be so much brighter than points where the sunlight would reflect back at say 45 deg to the avg surface. Doesn't make sense when I think of a forest of trees, but it is quite clear when same light refects of a truck on a highway. So I kind of get it. Thanks Peter and Robert. |
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#7
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Maule Driver wrote: Actually I see it on the ground but it is diffuse and unfocused - like a very strong headlight shining on a very distant area. You just get a diffuse bright spot. I think I get Peter's concept and understand it but can't quite get it to 'intuit'. But makes some sense. Can't quite understand why the area on the ground where sunlight would reflect back at 180deg (or normal to the average surface) would be so much brighter than points where the sunlight would reflect back at say 45 deg to the avg surface. Doesn't make sense when I think of a forest of trees, but it is quite clear when same light refects of a truck on a highway. So I kind of get it. Thanks Peter and Robert. Peter didn't really explain it. Except for specially-designed surfaces that incorporate corner reflectors (like taillights, or bicycle reflectors), a randomly-oriented surface doesn't preferentially reflect light back in the direction of it's source. However, the effect has a very simple explanation: The bright spot is simply the result of the absence of SHADOWS cast by objects on the ground. On a sunny day, EVERY object on the ground - rocks, blades of grass, trees, people - casts a SHADOW. When one looks at the ground from a considerable distance, each tiny object and it's *shadow* are all averaged together to contribute to the total brightness of the surface. However, when one looks at the ground from the direction of the Sun, every shadow DISAPPEARS behind the object that casts it! As a result, in that ONE direction there are NO SHADOWS to dilute the intensity of the light reflected back to the observer; the result is a *bright spot* in which the apparent reflectance is very nearly DOUBLE that in any other direction. The effect is not noticed if you are standing on the ground (or very near the ground in an airplane) because your OWN shadow blocks the sunlight in that direction. When the airplane climbs to a considerable height (such that it appears much smaller than the Sun as seen from the ground) the shadow of the airplane ceases to exist and no longer blocks the light in the "anti-sun" direction, allowing the effect to be seen. |
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#8
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"Mark Mallory" wrote in message
... Peter didn't really explain it. I wrote: "Your plane isn't projecting it. That just happens to be the spot where the sunlight is reflected by the greatest amount." Are you saying that you disagree that the sunlight is reflected back to the viewer by the greatest amount? Your post certainly seems to agree with mine. Yet, you seem to be taking issue with it, for some reason. Pete |
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#9
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"Kobra" wrote in message
... This may be something different, but I saw this flying to Lake George two weeks ago. I was about 1000' above the deck with the Sun high above me. My frontseat passenger keep saying a circular rainbow was following us and that the plane's shadow was in the middle of it. She took a picture of it that I thought would never show up. But it did. I have to get her to scan it. I told a friend of mine about it and he said that effect has a name. He found it on the web and sent me this link: http://www.touchingthelight.co.uk/features/brocken.htm Low and behold...that is what we saw. Kobra FWIW... If you want to bounce a target from directly out of the sun, place the sunball squarely on your intended target. |
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#10
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If you want to bounce a target from directly out of the sun, place the sunball squarely on your intended target. I know what each of these words means, but when put together in this manner I can't make head or tail out of it. Jose -- (for Email, make the obvious changes in my address) |
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