Various natural phenomena grace the sky often. One of the most common occurings are auroras, which occur because of Geomagnetic storms impacting Earth. However, there is one more phenomenon which occurs, and it is much rarer. As the Sun sets on the horizon and disappears from view during sunset, sometimes a green flash may appear. It is a meteorological optical phenomenon which may occur for a short period of time during sunrise or sunset. According to NASA, the green flash is caused by refraction of light rays traveling to the eye over a long path through the atmosphere.
Today's NASA Astronomy Picture of the Day is a mesmerizing snapshot of a multiple green flash sunset captured from the Cerro Tololo Inter-American Observatory in Chile last April. It was captured by T. Slovinsky and P. Horalek (IoP Opava).
Through its tech prowess, NASA caught the shorter wavelengths that refract more strongly than longer redder wavelengths and the separation of colours lends a green hue to the last visible vestige of the solar disk.
Although it is harder to witness this phenomena with naked eyes, a telescope or telephoto lens and camera can help catch this tantalizing result of atmospheric refraction when the celestial bodies are near the horizon. The Cerro Tololo Inter-American Observatory (CTIO) which captured it is a complex of astronomical telescopes and instruments, part of the NOIRLab program.
According to NOIRLab, CTIO operates the Víctor M. Blanco 4-meter Telescope on Cerro Tololo, which features the Dark Energy Camera (DECam), a high-performance, wide-field CCD imager built to carry out the Dark Energy Survey (DES).
Yes, but can your green flash do this? A green flash at sunset is a rare event that many Sun watchers pride
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