Untitled Document
Editor's
Note: In this picture, taken May 11 with a digital camera from the International
Space Station, the Moon seems to float inside Earth's atmosphere. Writing for
NASA, Tony Phillips explains what might be going on:
It's an illusion,
of course. The Moon is really a quarter of a million miles away. The picture
is tricky because of its uneven lighting. The Sun's elevation angle is only
6 degrees. On the left side of the image, night is falling; on the right side,
it's still broad daylight. This gradient of sunlight is the key to the illusion.
Atmospheric
optics expert Les Cowley explains: "The Moon is close to Earth's terminator,
so the atmosphere in front of it is not receiving much sunlight." Sunlit air
scatters light and glows blue. "We call this 'airlight,'" says Cowley. "But
in this image the air in front of the Moon is only dimly lit. The Moon is therefore
clear and bright because it is not masked by superimposed airlight."
"This makes
the Moon seem to be 'in front' of the atmosphere."
Uneven lighting
reinforces the illusion in another way: On the sunlit side of the image (right),
the boundary between air and land is distinct. Our brains extrapolate the direction
of Earth's limb, right to left, using information mostly from that sunlit area.
But the brain does it wrong. The extrapolated limb goes behind the Moon; so
the Moon seems to be in the foreground, floating on air. This idea, suggested
by the author.
Whatever the
explanation, the illusion is wonderful. And unexpected. It makes you wonder
... what's next?
-- Examples
of the process Cowley explains, are toward
the end of this NASA article.
SOURCE: The
crew of ISS Expedition 7, NASA
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