Monday, 30 January 2017

Faint Kern arc, long Schulthess arcs and possible 46° contact arcs


On 12. November routine plate stuff prevailed over large areas around Rovaniemi. As I drove around, in one location my eye caught an uppervex Parry arc so I stopped to photograph. Visible was also circumzenith arc and even though it was far from dazzling, I aimed the lens at zenith with Kern in mind. After all, you have to account for the sun elevation upon judging how good the cza really is. Those bright at higher sun may lose much of their lustre at low sun. And the lower the sun, the better for Kern. In this case the sun was low: elevation at 1315 local time was 4.6 degrees.

As shown above, the attempt was not in vain: there really seems to be a full circle around zenith. True, the Kern is extremely faint and there are banded artefacts in the image, so one must be careful here. But the regular circle seems different from these artefacts.

The image above shows three versions of a stack of 21 photos taken during 1m 59s (sun has not been tracked in any part of the process). One is blue-minus-red image and two others are made with background removal technique with two different gaussian blur and median noise values. Nicolas Lefaudeux had instructed me on this method. It is also described on his site. The fourth image is a simulation made with HaloPoint.

Because of the Kern’s visibility display rather close to the noise threshold, it would probably be best to refrain from further analysis. But because I made the simulation anyway, let’s say that the Kern’s relatively uniform intensity seems to point at crystals towards triangular shape and I had to use quite extreme triangularity in simulation as depicted by the crystal figure below.



The display has also exceptionally long Schulthess arcs – they extend all the way to 46° halo. The Lowitz oriented population used to simulate them gives also 46° contact arcs. In the actual display 46° contact arcs may be visible too, but it is hard to say because the artefact bands are oriented in similar direction.

For reference, below is also a single image straight from camera. Enhancing it (not shown) seemed also give out Kern arc, but it was even closer to noise threshold than the stack. In any case, the diamond dust was so uniform stacking did not really bring that much benefit.

5 comments:

  1. I remember Mikkilä's 2007 Kern observation. Has there been any other Kern observations by sun, or are these the only two so far and all the others by spotlight?

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  2. There are not many. Even in spotlight displays they are rare, but then the lamp is rarely above the horizon. Of course there would be much more solar Kerns if people knew to photograph them. My observation observation certainly is a proof of that. Here are the solar Kerns I know:

    Two cases by Reima Eresma (in high clouds):
    http://www.atoptics.co.uk/fz1128.htm
    http://www.taivaanvahti.fi/observations/show/8118

    Marko Pekkola and Emma Bruus last winter:
    http://www.taivaanvahti.fi/observations/show/49209
    https://mellon.kuvat.fi/kuvat/Halos/29.2.2016+Ice+crystal+halos/

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  3. Thanks, Marko! Great. Did not know about these observations.

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  4. The link above to one of my observations in Taivaanvahti is not right. The correct link is
    http://www.taivaanvahti.fi/observations/show/38958

    It has been in my mind to make a posting of the two cirrus Kern arcs, but so far I've been too lazy (or busy, whichever you prefer to read).

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  5. Thank you, Reima, much appreciated.

    I also think it would be useful at some point to compare all of the existing daylight observations together and offer some general advice as to how maximise the chances of capturing one. Marko commented recently that even experienced observers rarely concentrate on the region above the cza and even fewer stack.

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