So, Monday 9 February 2015 I didn't go to school because I was get sick. And on that day my english class held a Video conference, but too bad I can't came that day. It should be the first time I followed a video conference.. but I didn't :(
In my home, I really really got bored. I was just playing games alone, chatting with my friends, wathing TV with my family, etc. But, because of that I can done my homework because I just stay at home and didn't go to anywhere.
I hope I could follow the next Video Conference!!
Senin, 23 Februari 2015
Minggu, 22 Februari 2015
Rabu, 04 Februari 2015
Natural Phenomenon - Green Flash
How Does Green Flash Happen?
Green flashes are real (not illusory) phenomena seen at sunrise and sunset, when some part of the Sun suddenly changes color (at sunset, from red or orange to green or blue). The word “flash” refers to the sudden appearance and brief duration of this green color, which usually lasts only a second or two at moderate latitudes.
A green flash, which occurs more commonly at sunset — but can also occur at sunrise — is a phenomenon in which part of the sun can be observed suddenly and briefly changing color. It usually lasts only a second or two — which is why it is referred a flash — as the sun changes from red or orange at sunset, for example.
The green flash is viewable because refraction bends the light of the sun. The atmosphere acts as a weak prism, which separates light into various colors. When the sun's disk is fully visible above the horizon, the different colors of light rays overlap to an extent where each individual color can't be seen by the naked eyes.
But what actually causes the green flash? It is the result of the combination of two optical phenomena: a mirage and the dispersion of sunlight.
The first ingredient is a mirage. Like the famed desert mirage, the mirages that cause green flashes are the result of sunlight bending on its way to your eye and creating an image of an object somewhere other than its actual location.
Dispersion is the second ingredient. When the light bends (or refracts) on its way to your eye, the air acts as a prism to split up the light into its constituent colors. So, first the red light from the sun sets, followed by yellow, green, blue and violet.
How Green Flash Happen?
When the sun starts to dip below the horizon the colors of the spectrum disappear one at a time, starting with those with the longest wavelengths to those with the shortest. At sunrise, the process is reversed, and a green flash may occur as the top of the sun peeks above the horizon.
It is a primarily a green flash because more green light gets through and therefore is more clearly seen. Sometimes, when the air is especially clear, enough of the blue or violet light rays make it through the atmosphere, causing a blue flash to be visible. However, green is the most common hue reported and captured in photos.
To the untrained eye, all green flashes
may look the same. In fact there are a total of four types:
- the inferior-mirage
flash
- the mock-mirage
flash
- the sub-duct
flash and
- the green
ray.
What conditions are required to see
the green flash?
The green flash is best observed when
you have a clear view of the horizon uncluttered by foreground objects and
pollution free. This usually means you need to see a distance of several miles
"out", almost to the point where the curvature of the Earth defines
the limit. This is primarily why stories of seeing the green flash frequently
occur at the ocean. This is due to the additional amount of atmosphere one is
looking through at the horizon when the Sun is setting. In addition - and
equally important - is the fact that the line of sight is nearly parallel to
the horizon.
Why is it called a "green" flash and not a
"blue" flash?
Because contamination in the atmosphere
scatters blue light removing it from the line of sight. More green light gets
through and therefore is more clearly seen. In extraordinary conditions, a
"blue" flash might be seen.
Actually, all celestial objects
experience the same effect near the horizon; it is possible to see "green
flashes" from the setting Moon, Venus, or bright stars like Sirius.
The green flash is an atmospheric
refractive phenomenon where the top edge of the Sun will momentarily turn
green. It is seen rarely by the naked eye, primarily because it requires
specific conditions to occur, but also because it requires the observer to know
what to look for. Despite the name, there is no "flash"; the event
only lasts from a fraction of a second to at the longest, a few seconds.
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