It was fortunate that I discovered a new webcam for Rovaniemi on this day. After having spent the whole night out at below -30 C temps waiting for diamond dust to rise, and which never happened, I called it quits in the morning and was at bed 8 am. But I set the alarm for 11 am to check the webcams if things had changed. The sun was already reaching 2.5 degrees above the horizon at midday, which was starting to make solar display a realistic prospect.
Nothing had changed. There was no diamond dust visible in the three ski center cameras, nor elsewhere in the city. It was totally dry. But as I was about to close the browser and continue sleeping I happened to chance upon a Rovaniemi webcam that I had not known about. And it had a diamond dust display going on. Moreover, I thought of seeing an upper 24° plate arc in it.
I was out quick. When I come to my apartment from a halo hunt session I just throw my clothes in one pile on the floor. If I have to suddenly leave for another round, like now, they are readily arranged to get dressed fast. Five minutes and I am out.
Of course I then wasted too much valuable time looking for a place to photograph, making stupid navigating decisions. Yet I managed to get some photos:
The strong 20° upper plate arc got me looking for the upper 35° plate arcs, and I think I also saw them on the camera display. But I couldn't be sure whether or not I was seeing them with my eyes. Sometimes I though of seeing, the next moment not. To my chagrin I had forgotten (yet again) the convex mirror at the apartment.
But in the end I did happen to get an unquestionable visual of the 35° plate arcs. Not on the upper arcs, but on the lower ones made of glittering crystals against the ground. At first I was wondering why there is a 22° lower tangent arc, but soon realized it is of course the lower 20° plate arc. And at that point I caught also the 35° plate arcs flanking it.
This happened when the display had already markedly waned, with no odd radius halos in the sky visible to the eye. So these against-the-ground versions must probably be considered something of an easy catch in odd radius displays. I regret of not looking for them earlier, especially when I was taking the first photos on that bridge.
This is by no means the first account of 35° plate arcs observed this way. Walt Tape writes in his 2006 book with Moilanen the following on page 152: "In low level displays in Fairbanks we do sometimes see the lower 35° plate arcs below the horizon, showing up as concentrations of sparkles between ourselves and the ground, sometimes in the space of only a few meters."
While there is nothing special about this Rovaniemi display as such (we all know the Chinese routinely catch similar displays in high clouds spiced up with 28° arcs), the conditions that birthed it got me puzzled. My initial webcam survey that snow guns were not giving anything was actually right. As I arrived to the scene, I could see there was no cloud whatsoever growing out from guns. This display was made by the city main power plant, which grew an extensive cloud. Given that snow guns should by all experience be superior diamond dust makers, spewing out nuclei that themselves are ice, it beats me how this is possible. How can the guns fail but power plants work? I have no answer, but this is not the first time to have encountered such an anomaly. In 2017 there was a display that was formed by another, smaller power plant in the Saarenkylä area, and the guns were giving nothing at the same time.
I finish with some words on the performance of camera used, Canon EOS 80D. Olli Sälevä, a colleague here in Rovaniemi, lent it to me after my 40D broke. Because I had already placed an order for the same camera, I was horrified to see color banding artefacts reminisicent of those from the Nikon 3000 series cameras. It appeared the issue was not nearly that serious, though. Jari Luomanen, who took a look at one of the raws, pointed out that the artefacts change location according to the color temp. So they are not a property of image files, but rather something made by the editing software. You can play with color temp to move color bands to a position where they don't disturb so much or, better, stack the images with different color temps to largely wash them out. Of course, the latter increases significantly the after processing work burden, but at least it is relief to know they are not a fixed property of the files. The images below demonstrate these issues. There is also a comparison that shows how two softwares place the color bands differently in the image.
This is an interesting phenomenon. It would be lovely to see the results from some other converters too.
ReplyDeleteThat is a really nice pyramidal display. Did anything take place when it got darn and did you get any crystal samples?
ReplyDeleteDidn't try crystal to get samples. There wouldn't have been even time for that. If there was any action in the following night, it was some lame display not worth a mention. I'll be posting soon a good spotlight display from January.
ReplyDeleteI can't wait to see the new spot light display. That low sun pyramidal display was a very nice one. I almost could visualize 28d arc between the 24d halo and 35d halo and its arcs
DeleteI think what's in between is a suparhelic arc type of halo. But it is too faint anyway.
DeleteHi Marko,
ReplyDeletecongratulations to this nice observation. Wish this would work at my cozy place as well (only -20 °C here last night). The remarks about snow guns are very interesting. I also liked the insight in your life routine a as halo chaser! Concerning software, it might be worthwhile to try some self-written scripts in Python which will do arithmetics in double precision. This worked nicely for some higher-order rainbow photos last year. But I took the detour over a 16 bit tiff created from the raw file. It would be better if the raw file can be imported directly, but this was not an obvious thing to do for whatever reason.
Alexander Haußmann
Thanks for the input, Alexander. So it is starting to dawn on me that the popular image processing softwares are not up to the job. Of course it is beyond my skills to write those scripts, but it is good to know that there exist ways to avoid the artefacts.
ReplyDeleteWe had a cold snap in Rovaniemi, three nights around -30 C. I might of gotten some good results, from both diamond dust and surface displays, and will write something up as soon as I get the material processed.
Three years after asking it, I answer my own question. The question is in the third last paragraph of the main text. This winter, starting from new year until early February, they ran the guns without pressure air when it was colder than about -20..-25 C (practically, the air was hardly ever on). And without air there was no diamond dust. This must have been the case here as well, as well as with the 2017 display I refer to.
ReplyDeleteFor this winter's last proper cold snap, that lasted about a week in mid-February, they had the pressure air back on, giving city enveloping diamond dusts. The why's and wherefores of this heart change are unknown to me as I have not since gone talking with the Masters of Works at the slopes. But of course it was a mighty positive development, I had already regarded Rovaniemi ready for its requiem. When the guns were not on I had to chase power plant plume swarms. They are much more local affairs and thus more likely to occur in light polluted places where I could not do spotlight.