Earth's shadow
Earth's shadow or Earth shadow (also sometimes known as the dark segment) is the shadow that Earth itself casts onto its atmosphere and into outer space, toward the antisolar point. The shadow's fringe is often visible from the planet's surface as a dark and diffused band in a clear sky near the horizon. This atmospheric phenomenon can be seen twice during civil twilight (both dusk and dawn), rising after sunset and setting before sunrise.
Whereas the phenomenon of night (a function of being in the shadow of the Earth) is familiar, the effect of the Earth's shadow on the atmosphere is quite often visible in the sky, but often goes unrecognized. This shadow visibly falls on Earth's atmosphere during early dusk or late dawn twilight. When the weather conditions and where the observer's location permit a clear sight of the horizon, the shadow can be seen as a dark bluish or sometimes purplish band.
When the sky is clear, Earth's shadow is visible in the opposite half of the sky to the sunset or sunrise, seen as a dark bluish band just above the horizon. A related phenomenon in the same part of the sky is the Belt of Venus, or anti-twilight arch, a pinkish band visible above the bluish shade of Earth's shadow. No defined line divides the Earth's shadow and the Belt of Venus; one colored band blends into the other in the sky.
Appearance
The Earth's shadow (as it is cast onto the atmosphere) can be observed during the twilight hours, assuming the sky is clear and the horizon is relatively unobstructed. At sunset the Earth's shadow is visible opposite the sunset in the eastern sky, just above the horizon. The shadow shows as a dark blue band that stretches over 180° of the horizon.[1][2] It is most noticeable at the antisolar point, exactly opposite the sunset.
At sunrise, the Earth's shadow is seen in a similar way, but in the western sky. The Earth's shadow is best observed when there is a low horizon (such as over the sea), and when the sky conditions are very clear. In addition, the higher up an observer is standing to view the horizon, the sharper the shadow appears.[1][2]
At sunrise, the Earth's shadow can be seen to set as the sun itself rises, and at sunset, the Earth's shadow rises as the sun sets.[1]
Belt of Venus
In the right viewing conditions, a pink (or orange or purple) band is visible in the twilight sky just above the dark blue band of the Earth's shadow. This pink band is called the "anti-twilight arch" or "Belt of Venus". The name "Belt of Venus" is not connected with the planet Venus; the Belt of Venus is part of Earth's upper atmosphere which is illuminated by the setting or rising sun. It is visible either after the sun ceases to be visible (at sunset) or before the sun becomes visible (at sunrise).[1][2]
The Belt of Venus is quite a different phenomenon from the afterglow, which appears in the geometrically opposite part of the sky.
Color
When the sun is near the horizon at sunset or sunrise, the light from the sun is red; this is because the light is reaching the observer through an especially thick layer of the atmosphere, which works as a filter, scattering all but the red light.
From the viewpoint of the observer, the red sunlight directly illuminates small particles in the lower atmosphere on the other side of the sky from the sun. The red light is backscattered to the observer, and that is why the Belt of Venus appears pink.
The lower the sunset sun descends, the less clearly distinguished the boundary between the Earth's shadow and Belt of Venus becomes. This is because now the setting sun illuminates a thinner part of the upper atmosphere. The red light is not scattered there because there are fewer particles, and the eye only sees the "normal" (usual) blue sky, which is due to Rayleigh scattering from air molecules. Eventually, both the Earth's shadow and the Belt of Venus dissolve into the darkness of the night sky.[2]
Color of lunar eclipses
The Earth's shadow or umbra is as curved as the planet Earth is, and it extends 1.4 million kilometers into space (the antumbra, however, extends indefinitely). When the Sun, the Earth and the Moon are aligned perfectly (or almost perfectly), with the Earth in between the Sun and the Moon, the Earth's shadow falls onto the surface of the Moon which is facing the night side of the Earth, such that observers see the shadow gradually turn the bright full Moon dark, and then light again, creating a lunar eclipse.
During a lunar eclipse, a very small amount of light from the sun does however still reach the Moon, even when the lunar eclipse is total; this is light which has been refracted or bent as it passes through the Earth's atmosphere. This sunlight has been scattered by the dust in the Earth's atmosphere, and thus that light is red, in the same way that sunset and sunrise light is red. This weak red illumination is what causes the eclipsed Moon to be dimly reddish or copper-colored in appearance.[3]
See also
- Brocken spectre, the apparently enormous and magnified shadow of an observer cast upon the upper surfaces of clouds opposite the sun
References
- 1 2 3 4 Les Cowley. "Earth's shadow". www.atoptics.co.uk.
- 1 2 3 4 "What causes layers in the sunrise and sunset?". earthsky.org.
- ↑ David K. Lynch, William Charles Livingston (July 2001). Color and light in nature. Cambridge University Press; 2 edition. p. 38,39. ISBN 978-0-521-77504-5.
External links
- Definition of "dark segment"
- Image showing a much larger segment of the sky with dark segment and Belt of Venus
- Shadow of Earth, Belt of Venus as seen over Half Dome, Yosemite National Park, displayed in an interactive panorama. Scroll to the very bottom of the post to view, after all other Yosemite panoramas.