by MarkBour » Tue Jul 28, 2015 10:37 pm
Chris Peterson wrote:darksky2500 wrote:Definitely true about the rainbow. Not so sure about the anticrepuscular rays...
StareDecisis wrote:
Uh, both effects ALWAYS occur so that each observer sees them exactly opposite the sun. Another guy 5 feet to the left sees a different rainbow and a different set of anticrepuscular rays.
The center of the rainbow and the vanishing point of anticrepuscular rays will always be at the antisolar point, which is different for each observer. Every observer sees a different rainbow in the sense that the light rays reaching their eyes have taken a completely different path, through a different set of raindrops. But every observer sees the same anticrepuscular rays, which are just shadows. Two close observers see the same shadows, just from very slightly different viewpoints. To say they are seeing a different set of rays is like saying two people looking at a tree are seeing different trees just because their view is different.
Anticrepuscular rays are totally new to me, I've never seen them and this photo is very nice. I have to agree with Chris. If this is all true, then, as a result, if you saw this scene and were in a very fast vehicle moving perpendicular to the direction of the camera, You would see the rainbow magically moving with you, which I'm familiar with, but the rays, which have to stay pointed to the almost invariant vanishing point must rotate around it as you move. If you were moving to the right, they would rotate counter-clockwise. Does that sound correct? I'd love to see it some time.
[quote="Chris Peterson"][quote="darksky2500"]Definitely true about the rainbow. Not so sure about the anticrepuscular rays...
[quote="StareDecisis"]
Uh, both effects ALWAYS occur so that each observer sees them exactly opposite the sun. Another guy 5 feet to the left sees a different rainbow and a different set of anticrepuscular rays.[/quote][/quote]
The center of the rainbow and the vanishing point of anticrepuscular rays will always be at the antisolar point, which is different for each observer. Every observer sees a different rainbow in the sense that the light rays reaching their eyes have taken a completely different path, through a different set of raindrops. But every observer sees the same anticrepuscular rays, which are just shadows. Two close observers see the same shadows, just from very slightly different viewpoints. To say they are seeing a different set of rays is like saying two people looking at a tree are seeing different trees just because their view is different.[/quote]
Anticrepuscular rays are totally new to me, I've never seen them and this photo is very nice. I have to agree with Chris. If this is all true, then, as a result, if you saw this scene and were in a very fast vehicle moving perpendicular to the direction of the camera, You would see the rainbow magically moving with you, which I'm familiar with, but the rays, which have to stay pointed to the almost invariant vanishing point must rotate around it as you move. If you were moving to the right, they would rotate counter-clockwise. Does that sound correct? I'd love to see it some time.