NavList:
A Community Devoted to the Preservation and Practice of Celestial Navigation and Other Methods of Traditional Wayfinding
Re: Refraction
From: George Huxtable
Date: 2005 Aug 7, 10:09 +0100
From: George Huxtable
Date: 2005 Aug 7, 10:09 +0100
Replying yesterday to Robert Eno's recent question about weather conditions that can result in dip differing from its predicted value, I omitted to mention the effect of sea-ice. A pity, because it may be of special interest to Robert, in his Northern latitudes. I've seen reports of large deviations, by many arc-minutes, of the dip of the horizon when measured over a sheet of sea-ice. Also, in such circumstances, mirage effects near the horizon seem to be common. I can speculate about a possible reason. Where there's a water surface, its temperature doesn't vary much, because the surface water mixes to some extent with that of the body of the seawater just below, and that immense heat-reserve keeps things rather constant. As soon as the surface has frozen, however, the ice surface can no longer exchange heat with the water body, but is insulated from it depending on the ice thickness. At the end of a cold, clear, Arctic night, then, heat radiation into space from the ice surface could well end up with it being much colder than the air layer above it, and the resulting temperature gradient in the air layers close above that surface could greatly affect the dip. It's the converse effect to that of the Sun heating up the surface layer of desert sand, referred to in an earlier posting. I've seen reports from Arctic (perhaps Antarctic?) land-explorers, sledging over an ice-shelf that simply has to be flat, that the surrounding horizon often appears to the eye as though they are travelling at the bottom of an immense saucer depression, seeming to be uphill in every direction. A dispiriting prospect indeed! No matter how far they travel on, they still seem to stay at the bottom of that saucer. Presumably this is the result of a large negative value of dip.To be apparent to the eye, without using instruments, such a distortion of the horizon level must be immense; a matter of some degrees, at a guess. Presumably this is the result of warmer air overlying a very cold ice surface, and with rather still air so that little mixing occurs in the lower air layers. George. =============================================================== Contact George at george@huxtable.u-net.com ,or by phone +44 1865 820222, or from within UK 01865 820222. Or by post- George Huxtable, 1 Sandy Lane, Southmoor, Abingdon, Oxon OX13 5HX, UK.