I am a glider pilot and have observed an unexpected 'pheomena" of apparent refraction of light. I have queried many people including scientists but still have no satisfactory explanation. Perhaps someone out there can help.
Observation:
When flying a glider on a sunny day and late in the afternoon, I often look at the ground where I expect to see a shadow of the glider.
I do NOT see a shadow, but a bright concentration of light where I would expect to see a shadow.
It appears that the glider is acting as a long focus lens with a positive refractive index to produce this surprising observation.
I have heard of astronomers using the term "micro lensing" which refers to the refraction of light around a celestial object to determine presence or distance of astronomical objects, is this what is happening here?
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refraction of light?
Re: refraction of light?
No microlensing (one word) is caused by massive objects like stars. In these cases the gravitational potential well deflects the path of the light. A glider does not have sufficient mass to cause this at anywhere near a perceptable level.jcoll wrote: It appears that the glider is acting as a long focus lens with a positive refractive index to produce this surprising observation.
I have heard of astronomers using the term "micro lensing" which refers to the refraction of light around a celestial object to determine presence or distance of astronomical objects, is this what is happening here?
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BMAONE stop shouting.
Can't you find the caps lock key?
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