by Ann » Sat May 14, 2022 8:08 pm
I find the photo below very beautiful, and I note that it is
from Sweden:
There have been a number of fine halos in Swedish skies. An interesting historical painting is the so called "Vädersolstavlan", "The Weather Sun Painting", which shows a halo display over Stockholm in 1535:
Wikipedia wrote:
17th century painting of Stockholm, a copy of the so called Vädersolstavlan, depicting a halo display event in 1535. Cleaned in 1998. The visible haloes are: 22 ° halo, at upper right (should be centered on the Sun) parhelic circle, large white circle (centered on the zenith: appears 'horizontal' in the sky) parhelia including 2 sundogs, 2 120° parhelia and the anthelion (dots on the parhelic circle, resp. nearest to farthest from the Sun) upper tangent arc and possible Parry arc (2 crossing arcs just left of the 22° halo (actually 'above' the 22°, in the sky); not realistically shown) circumzenithal arc, smaller crescent inside the parhelic circle (also centered on the zenith: appears 'horizontal', high in the sky) infralateral arc (bottom right) Note that the whole sky appears strongly tilted in the image: the upper right corner is actually down in the sky (when looking towards the Sun), the zenith is at the center of the circumzenithal arc and parhelic circle. This may result from the artist's choice to represent the display in a realistic orientation relative to the landscape: in this case the sun would have shone from 3/4 back to the right of an observer facing the city. The relative brightnesses of the haloes are quite accurate.
Ann
I find the photo below very beautiful, and I note that it is [url=https://apod.nasa.gov/apod/ap181221.html]from Sweden[/url]:
[float=left][img3="Extraordinary Solar Halos. Image Credit & Copyright: Magnus Edback"]https://apod.nasa.gov/apod/image/1812/IMG_8741_cSunHaloEdback1024.jpg[/img3][/float]
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There have been a number of fine halos in Swedish skies. An interesting historical painting is the so called "Vädersolstavlan", "The Weather Sun Painting", which shows a halo display over Stockholm in 1535:
[img3="Vädersolstavlan. Artist: Jacob Heinrich Elbfas"]https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/2/2a/V%C3%A4dersoltavlan_cropped.JPG[/img3]
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[quote][url=https://sv.wikipedia.org/wiki/Vädersolstavlan#/media/Fil:Vädersoltavlan_cropped.JPG]Wikipedia[/url] wrote:
17th century painting of Stockholm, a copy of the so called Vädersolstavlan, depicting a halo display event in 1535. Cleaned in 1998. The visible haloes are: 22 ° halo, at upper right (should be centered on the Sun) parhelic circle, large white circle (centered on the zenith: appears 'horizontal' in the sky) parhelia including 2 sundogs, 2 120° parhelia and the anthelion (dots on the parhelic circle, resp. nearest to farthest from the Sun) upper tangent arc and possible Parry arc (2 crossing arcs just left of the 22° halo (actually 'above' the 22°, in the sky); not realistically shown) circumzenithal arc, smaller crescent inside the parhelic circle (also centered on the zenith: appears 'horizontal', high in the sky) infralateral arc (bottom right) Note that the whole sky appears strongly tilted in the image: the upper right corner is actually down in the sky (when looking towards the Sun), the zenith is at the center of the circumzenithal arc and parhelic circle. This may result from the artist's choice to represent the display in a realistic orientation relative to the landscape: in this case the sun would have shone from 3/4 back to the right of an observer facing the city. The relative brightnesses of the haloes are quite accurate.[/quote]
Ann