GLARE AND CELESTIAL VISIBILITY

Glare is when a bright source of light hides a nearby fainter source and is caused by scattering of light within the atmosphere, the telescope, and the eyeball. In this paper I develop a model of the effects of glare on the visibility of astronomical sources as viewed with the human eye whether unai...

Full description

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Published inPublications of the Astronomical Society of the Pacific Vol. 103; no. 665; pp. 645 - 660
Main Author SCHAEFER, BRADLEY E.
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published Legacy CDMS The Astronomical Society of the Pacific 01.07.1991
University of Chicago Press
Subjects
Online AccessGet full text
ISSN0004-6280
1538-3873
DOI10.1086/132865

Cover

Loading…
Abstract Glare is when a bright source of light hides a nearby fainter source and is caused by scattering of light within the atmosphere, the telescope, and the eyeball. In this paper I develop a model of the effects of glare on the visibility of astronomical sources as viewed with the human eye whether unaided or through a telescope. This model is tested and found to closely reproduce observations of lunar appulses, Galilean satellites, the Martian moons, well-known double stars, and lunar occultations. Glare calculations are then applied to a wide variety of situations of historical and astronomical interest. (1) Ancient Chinese lunar appulse reports have been used to determine the acceleration of the Earth's rotation. However, a detailed analysis shows that the results depend critically on the adopted weighting scheme and that the ancient Chinese reports contain too many errors to allow for a meaningful conclusion. (2) The Crucifixion eclipse of A.D. 33 April 3 (or any other partial lunar eclipse with less than ≈70% coverage by the umbra) would not have appeared "blood colored" because of the eclipse, since scattered white light from the penumbra will always mask the faint red light in the umbra. (3) Contrary to a statement by Aristotle, the visibility of stars from the bottom of deep wells or chimneys is worse than the visibility under an open sky. (4) Venus can be barely visible at inferior conjunction under optimal conditions with no optical aid. (5) An observing strategy is proposed which may lead to the discovery of several sungrazing comets per year by observations with small ground-based telescopes. (6) The effects of glare on the visibility of stars in loose open clusters is small. (7) The conditions for the detection of double stars are derived. (8) The model suggests various procedures for observers afflicted with glare, of which the most important is that the magnification should be pushed to the maximum usable power. (9) Various challenges are presented for observers, including the creation of a worldwide network to discover sungrazing comets.
AbstractList A model of the effects of glare on the visibility of astronomical sources as viewed with the human eye is developed whether unaided or through a telescope. This model closely reproduces observations of lunar appulses, Galilean satellites, Martian moons, double stars, and lunar occultations. Glare calculations are then applied to situations of historical and astronomical interest.
Glare is when a bright source of light hides a nearby fainter source and is caused by scattering of light within the atmosphere, the telescope, and the eyeball. In this paper I develop a model of the effects of glare on the visibility of astronomical sources as viewed with the human eye whether unaided or through a telescope. This model is tested and found to closely reproduce observations of lunar appulses, Galilean satellites, the Martian moons, well-known double stars, and lunar occultations. Glare calculations are then applied to a wide variety of situations of historical and astronomical interest. (1) Ancient Chinese lunar appulse reports have been used to determine the acceleration of the Earth's rotation. However, a detailed analysis shows that the results depend critically on the adopted weighting scheme and that the ancient Chinese reports contain too many errors to allow for a meaningful conclusion. (2) The Crucifixion eclipse of A.D. 33 April 3 (or any other partial lunar eclipse with less than ≈70% coverage by the umbra) would not have appeared "blood colored" because of the eclipse, since scattered white light from the penumbra will always mask the faint red light in the umbra. (3) Contrary to a statement by Aristotle, the visibility of stars from the bottom of deep wells or chimneys is worse than the visibility under an open sky. (4) Venus can be barely visible at inferior conjunction under optimal conditions with no optical aid. (5) An observing strategy is proposed which may lead to the discovery of several sungrazing comets per year by observations with small ground-based telescopes. (6) The effects of glare on the visibility of stars in loose open clusters is small. (7) The conditions for the detection of double stars are derived. (8) The model suggests various procedures for observers afflicted with glare, of which the most important is that the magnification should be pushed to the maximum usable power. (9) Various challenges are presented for observers, including the creation of a worldwide network to discover sungrazing comets.
Audience PUBLIC
Author SCHAEFER, BRADLEY E.
Author_xml – sequence: 1
  givenname: BRADLEY E.
  surname: SCHAEFER
  fullname: SCHAEFER, BRADLEY E.
BackLink http://pascal-francis.inist.fr/vibad/index.php?action=getRecordDetail&idt=19848125$$DView record in Pascal Francis
BookMark eNpdkEFLwzAUgINMcE79BSq76Mnqe0mTpsc66ywUBTcFTyFNUuiY7Uh68d9bqeyw0zu8j-89vlMyabvWEXKBcI8gxQMyKgU_IlPkTEZMJmxCpgAQR4JKOCGnIWwAECXClFwvy-w9n2evT_NFXuardZGV889iVTwWZbH-OiPHtd4Gd_4_Z-TjOV8vXqLybVkssjIylMs-SpKqQiFsbakD6kQSo61qI7QcfogTY4Xj3FXSOStpYivDrKgoiMS6NObWsBm5Gb07HYze1l63pglq55tv7X8UpjKWSPnA3Y2c8V0I3tXKNL3um67tvW62CkH9NVBjgwG_PcD3xkPwcgRbHbQaZGG4mSKAoOkQcEauxvUm9J3fS2IQHEXK2S_O9mnB
CODEN PASPAU
CitedBy_id crossref_primary_10_1111_j_1749_6632_1996_tb23174_x
crossref_primary_10_1093_mnras_stx1316
crossref_primary_10_3390_histories1030016
crossref_primary_10_1038_369613a0
crossref_primary_10_1016_0083_6656_93_90113_X
crossref_primary_10_1016_j_icarus_2022_115112
crossref_primary_10_1080_15502724_2021_1921593
crossref_primary_10_4236_jhepgc_2016_24048
crossref_primary_10_1051_0004_6361_201833759
crossref_primary_10_1109_THMS_2015_2469155
ContentType Journal Article
Copyright 1991 Astronomical Society of the Pacific
1991 INIST-CNRS
Copyright_xml – notice: 1991 Astronomical Society of the Pacific
– notice: 1991 INIST-CNRS
DBID CYE
CYI
AAYXX
CITATION
IQODW
DOI 10.1086/132865
DatabaseName NASA Scientific and Technical Information
NASA Technical Reports Server
CrossRef
Pascal-Francis
DatabaseTitle CrossRef
DatabaseTitleList

DeliveryMethod fulltext_linktorsrc
Discipline Astronomy & Astrophysics
EISSN 1538-3873
EndPage 660
ExternalDocumentID 19848125
10_1086_132865
19910062987
40651695
GroupedDBID -DZ
-~X
123
2AX
2WC
4.4
6TJ
AAGCD
AAHTB
AAJIO
AALHV
AATNI
AAVDF
ABBHK
ABHWH
ABJNI
ABPEJ
ABVAM
ABXSQ
ACBEA
ACDEK
ACGFO
ACGFS
ACHIP
ADAAO
ADEQX
ADULT
ADWVK
AEFHF
AENEX
AEOZU
AETEA
AEUPB
AFQQW
AFYNE
AHIZY
AKPSB
ALMA_UNASSIGNED_HOLDINGS
AOAED
ASPBG
AS~
ATQHT
AVWKF
AZFZN
BIPZW
CJUJL
CRLBU
CS3
DU5
EBS
HVGLF
IJHAN
IOP
IPSME
IZVLO
JAAYA
JBMMH
JENOY
JHFFW
JKQEH
JLEZI
JLXEF
JPL
JST
KOT
L7B
LU7
M45
MVM
N5L
NB9
OK1
P2P
PJBAE
R.V
RIN
ROL
RPA
SA0
WH7
XOL
YR2
ZCA
ZCG
ZY4
AEINN
CYE
CYI
AAYXX
AFFNX
CEBXE
CITATION
EJD
HF~
KQ8
SY9
IQODW
ID FETCH-LOGICAL-c258t-77bb166dfd2e02e6741dbfc6a815347cd6e55eb8eed827dbc3d6b2067de945dc3
ISSN 0004-6280
IngestDate Mon Jul 21 09:13:53 EDT 2025
Tue Jul 01 00:42:14 EDT 2025
Thu Apr 24 23:06:52 EDT 2025
Fri Aug 15 15:25:28 EDT 2025
Thu May 29 08:42:20 EDT 2025
IsDoiOpenAccess false
IsOpenAccess true
IsPeerReviewed true
IsScholarly true
Issue 665
Keywords Models
Astronomical optics
Visibility
Glare
Scattered light
Visual observation
Language English
License CC BY 4.0
LinkModel OpenURL
MergedId FETCHMERGED-LOGICAL-c258t-77bb166dfd2e02e6741dbfc6a815347cd6e55eb8eed827dbc3d6b2067de945dc3
Notes CDMS
Legacy CDMS
ISSN: 0004-6280
OpenAccessLink https://iopscience.iop.org/article/10.1086/132865/pdf
PageCount 16
ParticipantIDs pascalfrancis_primary_19848125
crossref_citationtrail_10_1086_132865
crossref_primary_10_1086_132865
nasa_ntrs_19910062987
jstor_primary_40651695
ProviderPackageCode CITATION
AAYXX
PublicationCentury 1900
PublicationDate 1991-07-01
PublicationDateYYYYMMDD 1991-07-01
PublicationDate_xml – month: 07
  year: 1991
  text: 1991-07-01
  day: 01
PublicationDecade 1990
PublicationPlace Legacy CDMS
PublicationPlace_xml – name: Legacy CDMS
– name: Chicago, IL
PublicationTitle Publications of the Astronomical Society of the Pacific
PublicationYear 1991
Publisher The Astronomical Society of the Pacific
University of Chicago Press
Publisher_xml – name: The Astronomical Society of the Pacific
– name: University of Chicago Press
SSID ssj0011810
Score 1.4579841
Snippet Glare is when a bright source of light hides a nearby fainter source and is caused by scattering of light within the atmosphere, the telescope, and the...
A model of the effects of glare on the visibility of astronomical sources as viewed with the human eye is developed whether unaided or through a telescope....
SourceID pascalfrancis
crossref
nasa
jstor
SourceType Index Database
Enrichment Source
Publisher
StartPage 645
SubjectTerms Astronomical magnitude
Astronomy
Comets
Earth, ocean, space
Earths Moon
Exact sciences and technology
Eyes
Fundamental astronomy and astrophysics. Instrumentation, techniques, and astronomical observations
Galilean satellites
Glare
Limiting magnitude
Martian satellites
Observation and data reduction techniques. Computer modeling and simulation
Stars
Telescopes
The Solar System
Title GLARE AND CELESTIAL VISIBILITY
URI https://www.jstor.org/stable/40651695
https://ntrs.nasa.gov/citations/19910062987
Volume 103
hasFullText 1
inHoldings 1
isFullTextHit
isPrint
link http://utb.summon.serialssolutions.com/2.0.0/link/0/eLvHCXMwnV1Lb9QwELZ4XLigAq26tCw5FC4oq6wTO84xXVI2aKGoTVFvkZ8ntEVke2h_PePYeaxKJdpLZMXJJJkZTcbjmfkQOpJpxgXhUQiuKAmTWMiQR4aHoEBmbmxTLW7rnb99p8uL5OslueyAxn11yUbM5O0_60oeI1U4B3K1VbIPkGxPFE7AGOQLR5AwHP9Lxl9W-VnRNohaFKvivCrz1aef5Xl5XK7KasvvHEfnurSAvLFh8CvXL6DL3vRzPlevj78slnlx4pImjs_yz7YPdzEbIgYusykdRwyqBzyhs5pJSLFDXJrpwVDGzMGQ9JY0ikcqQykZWUbqukb6nyx1IAJ37HfUbifBCpn5m7d7YYP3Yff1yFP0HMOywEJ1lKc_-l0j8FZcyZF_3xGWlCO55Xy4_FP4Fa95w21OLG-AG8bhmYycjGoHvfSrgyB3on6Fnuj1a7TfsfEm-Bi0YxeOat6gaasBAWhA0GtAMGjALro4KarFMvSIF6HEhG1gqSPEnFJlFNYR1hTcPSWMpJwBv5NUKqoJ0YKBY8NwqoSMFRW2Ab_SWUKUjPfga67Weh8FETW25hrPBRdJltivp1Qwo3TEeGzwBH3oWFFL3w7eopL8qtu0BEZrx7IJet9f99s1QLlzxV7LyX66k9IE7VrW1kC3qa0i2oLdjKUTNN3i9UA3s-AOmLy9j-IBejEo9CF6tvlzrd-BU7gR01YT_gIwylfV
linkProvider IOP Publishing
openUrl ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info%3Aofi%2Fenc%3AUTF-8&rfr_id=info%3Asid%2Fsummon.serialssolutions.com&rft_val_fmt=info%3Aofi%2Ffmt%3Akev%3Amtx%3Ajournal&rft.genre=article&rft.atitle=GLARE+AND+CELESTIAL+VISIBILITY&rft.jtitle=Publications+of+the+Astronomical+Society+of+the+Pacific&rft.au=SCHAEFER%2C+BRADLEY+E.&rft.date=1991-07-01&rft.pub=The+Astronomical+Society+of+the+Pacific&rft.issn=0004-6280&rft.eissn=1538-3873&rft.volume=103&rft.issue=665&rft.spage=645&rft.epage=660&rft_id=info:doi/10.1086%2F132865&rft.externalDocID=40651695
thumbnail_l http://covers-cdn.summon.serialssolutions.com/index.aspx?isbn=/lc.gif&issn=0004-6280&client=summon
thumbnail_m http://covers-cdn.summon.serialssolutions.com/index.aspx?isbn=/mc.gif&issn=0004-6280&client=summon
thumbnail_s http://covers-cdn.summon.serialssolutions.com/index.aspx?isbn=/sc.gif&issn=0004-6280&client=summon