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Monday, August 10, 2009

The Elusive Beauty of Lunar Rainbows


Moonbow_Yosemite_Lower_Fall
Moonbow, Yosemite Lower Falls, Photo: Meng Tang

When the moon is near its fullest, and barely a cloud veils its face, certain locations on earth treat observers to the scarcely seen light phenomenon known as the lunar rainbow, or moonbow. Like daytime-occurring rainbows, moonbows are formed when rays of light bounce off water droplets suspended in the air – the vapour of a raincloud, say, or the spray from a thundering waterfall – though of course they are caused not by the direct light of the sun but by that which is reflected by the moon.

Driving through a night time archway: Moonbow on Fraser Island, Australia
moonbow_rainbow_at_night_fraser_island
Photo: G a r r y

Like their diurnal counterparts, moonbows always appear in the part of the sky opposite the celestial body that provides their light source, with the moon thus positioned behind the viewer. Except for those lunar bows whose medium is the mist of waterfalls, a rare combination of a low moon and a dark sky are needed to create this spectacular sight – not to mention rainfall up ahead.

Gold at the end of the moonbow: Captured over the Pacific Ocean in Tahiti
Moonbow_over_the_Pacific_Ocean_in_Tahiti
Photo: Pierre Lessage

Even with the moon at its brightest, moonbows are faint compared to typical rainbows due to the low quantity of light shone down by our only satellite. The glow is too weak to stimulate the colour receptors of the naked eye – meaning moonbows are often seen as being white – so it’s lucky long-exposure photography has stepped in, enabling us to see all the colours of the moonbow.

Misty moonbow: Dark and drizzly but notice the glowing grass in the foreground
lunar_rainbow_or_moonbow_over_loch
Photo: Jo Bradford

Photographers have written reams about how best to capture this singular phenomenon. Tips include the use of a tripod, switching to manual focus, and bracketing exposure time to avoid a white blur, with looking for your shadow, and starting with a fresh roll of film and batteries among other pointers mentioned.

African moonbow: Lunar rainbow taken from the Zambian side of Victoria Falls
Lunar_Rainbow_taken_from_the_Zambia_side_of_Victoria_Falls
Photo: Calvin Bradshaw

Of course, you’ve also got to know where to find moonbows, since there are only a small number of places in the world where they regularly materialise. Victoria Falls on the border between Zambia and Zimbabwe, Cumberland Falls in Kentucky, Yosemite Falls in California, and Waimea on Hawaii are some of the best known.

Perfect arc: A stunning arched moonbow formed over Hawaii
Hawaii_moonbow
Photo: Hawaii Preparatory Observatory

Harvest moonbow: A beautiful curve of colours over Cumberland Falls, USA
Moonbow_Harvest_Moonbow_Cumberland_Falls_State_Park
Photo: Bryce Fields

Dreamy scene: Water spray from Yosemite Falls brightly coloured by a moonbow
Yosemite_Falls_Moonbow_wash_of_colour
Photo: satosphere

Yosemite is such a hotspot for viewing moonbows that a team of astronomers at Texas State University were inspired to develop a computer programme which can reliably predict when moonbows are likely to appear at the falls of America’s famous national park – other factors such as a clear sky permitting.

Wash of colour: Another moonbow forming beneath Lower Yosemite Falls
moonbow_Lower_Yosemite_Falls
Photo: Ambitious Wench

People have been watching moonbows since Aristotle’s day – and doubtless long before – but this research is the first time anyone has calculated precise dates and times for their appearance. Now it is hoped we may better appreciate this incredible yet elusive natural wonder.

Picture this: Star trails get in on the act in our final glorious shot from Yosemite
Yosemite_Falls_Star_Trails_and_Moonbow
Photo: SocalJC

Let’s leave with the words of naturalist and pioneering environmentalist John Muir in an extract from his 1912 book, The Yosemite, which describes the great man’s experience of a moonbow: “This grand arc of color, glowing in mild, shapely beauty in so weird and huge a chamber of night shadows, and amid the rush and roar and tumultuous dashing of this thunder-voiced fall, is one of the most impressive and most cheering of all the blessed mountain evangels.”

Sources: 1, 2, 3, 4

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