Two suns - help me out here :)
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Here's a google images link[^] Now, I've actually seen this effect a few times myself, especially over the Pacific ocean. The problem is, the web is currently inundated with the new ager's claiming all sorts of BS, so finding some science about this effect is proving a bit hard (for me at least). Anyone have a link to some good science explaining this? I can pretty much figure out that it's an atmospheric effect, but I'd like something with some authority describing it. I want to provide something concrete for a friend of mine that's, well, been rather sun-struck by this. :rolleyes: In the meantime, I'll keep googling. Marc
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Here's a google images link[^] Now, I've actually seen this effect a few times myself, especially over the Pacific ocean. The problem is, the web is currently inundated with the new ager's claiming all sorts of BS, so finding some science about this effect is proving a bit hard (for me at least). Anyone have a link to some good science explaining this? I can pretty much figure out that it's an atmospheric effect, but I'd like something with some authority describing it. I want to provide something concrete for a friend of mine that's, well, been rather sun-struck by this. :rolleyes: In the meantime, I'll keep googling. Marc
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Here's a google images link[^] Now, I've actually seen this effect a few times myself, especially over the Pacific ocean. The problem is, the web is currently inundated with the new ager's claiming all sorts of BS, so finding some science about this effect is proving a bit hard (for me at least). Anyone have a link to some good science explaining this? I can pretty much figure out that it's an atmospheric effect, but I'd like something with some authority describing it. I want to provide something concrete for a friend of mine that's, well, been rather sun-struck by this. :rolleyes: In the meantime, I'll keep googling. Marc
It depends. Typically there are two reasons for this - if the sun is shown side by side, it normally means that the image has been shot through a window or a plane filter is on the camera. If the suns are further apart, then it's probably ice particles in the atmosphere resulting in the light being bent.
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Here's a google images link[^] Now, I've actually seen this effect a few times myself, especially over the Pacific ocean. The problem is, the web is currently inundated with the new ager's claiming all sorts of BS, so finding some science about this effect is proving a bit hard (for me at least). Anyone have a link to some good science explaining this? I can pretty much figure out that it's an atmospheric effect, but I'd like something with some authority describing it. I want to provide something concrete for a friend of mine that's, well, been rather sun-struck by this. :rolleyes: In the meantime, I'll keep googling. Marc
It just means you're on Tatooine.
Craigslist Troll: litaly@comcast.net "I have a theory that the truth is never told during the nine-to-five hours. " — Hunter S. Thompson
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Here's a google images link[^] Now, I've actually seen this effect a few times myself, especially over the Pacific ocean. The problem is, the web is currently inundated with the new ager's claiming all sorts of BS, so finding some science about this effect is proving a bit hard (for me at least). Anyone have a link to some good science explaining this? I can pretty much figure out that it's an atmospheric effect, but I'd like something with some authority describing it. I want to provide something concrete for a friend of mine that's, well, been rather sun-struck by this. :rolleyes: In the meantime, I'll keep googling. Marc
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sun_dog[^] Although this looks a LOT different to the images on Google.
See if you can crack this: b749f6c269a746243debc6488046e33f
So far, no one seems to have cracked this!The unofficial awesome history of Code Project's Bob! "People demand freedom of speech to make up for the freedom of thought which they avoid."
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Most folks were saying it's atmospheric refraction - albeit an extremely rare form of it - similar to the effect that causes sun dogs.
Hmmm, doesn't refraction usually only produce one image, though offset from where one would expect the image to be?
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Here's a google images link[^] Now, I've actually seen this effect a few times myself, especially over the Pacific ocean. The problem is, the web is currently inundated with the new ager's claiming all sorts of BS, so finding some science about this effect is proving a bit hard (for me at least). Anyone have a link to some good science explaining this? I can pretty much figure out that it's an atmospheric effect, but I'd like something with some authority describing it. I want to provide something concrete for a friend of mine that's, well, been rather sun-struck by this. :rolleyes: In the meantime, I'll keep googling. Marc
Light from the Sun reflecting light off of a mostly cloud-filled sky which then reflects intensely off the Moon back to Earth, making the Moon look like a second star?
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Hmmm, doesn't refraction usually only produce one image, though offset from where one would expect the image to be?
If you only have one refractive boundary (like between air and a body of water), then yes. But the refraction boundaries we're talking about here are between the air and millions of individual ice crystals which will cause millions of individual images and, depending on the viewing angle and local accumulation and angle of those crystals, cause things like Sun Dogs.
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http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sun_dog[^] Although this looks a LOT different to the images on Google.
See if you can crack this: b749f6c269a746243debc6488046e33f
So far, no one seems to have cracked this!The unofficial awesome history of Code Project's Bob! "People demand freedom of speech to make up for the freedom of thought which they avoid."
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Here's a google images link[^] Now, I've actually seen this effect a few times myself, especially over the Pacific ocean. The problem is, the web is currently inundated with the new ager's claiming all sorts of BS, so finding some science about this effect is proving a bit hard (for me at least). Anyone have a link to some good science explaining this? I can pretty much figure out that it's an atmospheric effect, but I'd like something with some authority describing it. I want to provide something concrete for a friend of mine that's, well, been rather sun-struck by this. :rolleyes: In the meantime, I'll keep googling. Marc
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Here's a google images link[^] Now, I've actually seen this effect a few times myself, especially over the Pacific ocean. The problem is, the web is currently inundated with the new ager's claiming all sorts of BS, so finding some science about this effect is proving a bit hard (for me at least). Anyone have a link to some good science explaining this? I can pretty much figure out that it's an atmospheric effect, but I'd like something with some authority describing it. I want to provide something concrete for a friend of mine that's, well, been rather sun-struck by this. :rolleyes: In the meantime, I'll keep googling. Marc
Not sure I can help that much - this is the best general link I found[^] Like other people have said, I think that this is an atmospheric phenomenon related to sun dogs - the Hong Kong Observatory web site has a good explanation of the science of sun dogs[^]
Graham Librarians rule, Ook!
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It just means you're on Tatooine.
Craigslist Troll: litaly@comcast.net "I have a theory that the truth is never told during the nine-to-five hours. " — Hunter S. Thompson
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Here's a google images link[^] Now, I've actually seen this effect a few times myself, especially over the Pacific ocean. The problem is, the web is currently inundated with the new ager's claiming all sorts of BS, so finding some science about this effect is proving a bit hard (for me at least). Anyone have a link to some good science explaining this? I can pretty much figure out that it's an atmospheric effect, but I'd like something with some authority describing it. I want to provide something concrete for a friend of mine that's, well, been rather sun-struck by this. :rolleyes: In the meantime, I'll keep googling. Marc
It has nothing to do with ice crystals, refraction, blah blah blah. Just put down the bottle of booze, stub out that reefer, throw away the pills, and go and lie down for a couple of days :)
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Here's a google images link[^] Now, I've actually seen this effect a few times myself, especially over the Pacific ocean. The problem is, the web is currently inundated with the new ager's claiming all sorts of BS, so finding some science about this effect is proving a bit hard (for me at least). Anyone have a link to some good science explaining this? I can pretty much figure out that it's an atmospheric effect, but I'd like something with some authority describing it. I want to provide something concrete for a friend of mine that's, well, been rather sun-struck by this. :rolleyes: In the meantime, I'll keep googling. Marc
It's the beer, Marc... C'mon, you can admit it to us. ;)
Will Rogers never met me.
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Here's a google images link[^] Now, I've actually seen this effect a few times myself, especially over the Pacific ocean. The problem is, the web is currently inundated with the new ager's claiming all sorts of BS, so finding some science about this effect is proving a bit hard (for me at least). Anyone have a link to some good science explaining this? I can pretty much figure out that it's an atmospheric effect, but I'd like something with some authority describing it. I want to provide something concrete for a friend of mine that's, well, been rather sun-struck by this. :rolleyes: In the meantime, I'll keep googling. Marc
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Here's a google images link[^] Now, I've actually seen this effect a few times myself, especially over the Pacific ocean. The problem is, the web is currently inundated with the new ager's claiming all sorts of BS, so finding some science about this effect is proving a bit hard (for me at least). Anyone have a link to some good science explaining this? I can pretty much figure out that it's an atmospheric effect, but I'd like something with some authority describing it. I want to provide something concrete for a friend of mine that's, well, been rather sun-struck by this. :rolleyes: In the meantime, I'll keep googling. Marc
The chinese one seems to me to be one sun with some clouds in front of it - so the sun is larger and covered except for the two bits you can see
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Here's a google images link[^] Now, I've actually seen this effect a few times myself, especially over the Pacific ocean. The problem is, the web is currently inundated with the new ager's claiming all sorts of BS, so finding some science about this effect is proving a bit hard (for me at least). Anyone have a link to some good science explaining this? I can pretty much figure out that it's an atmospheric effect, but I'd like something with some authority describing it. I want to provide something concrete for a friend of mine that's, well, been rather sun-struck by this. :rolleyes: In the meantime, I'll keep googling. Marc
It's simple: we do have two suns. Just one of them is shy, and tends to hide behind the other.
Real men don't use instructions. They are only the manufacturers opinion on how to put the thing together. Manfred R. Bihy: "Looks as if OP is learning resistant."