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Comet Ephemerides with Geometry and Visibility Info by Steve Albers

Comet Ephemerides with Geometry and Visibility Info

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Comet Ephemerides with Geometry and Visibility Info. by Steve Albers. DEC, RA, Distance from Sun and Earth Magnitude, Tail Length, Tail orientation Phase Angle, Elongation Rise/Set Times, Time/Altitude for best viewing Visibility compared to naked eye, binocular thresholds - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Comet Ephemerides with Geometry and Visibility Info

Comet Ephemerides with Geometry and Visibility

Info

by Steve Albers

Page 2: Comet Ephemerides with Geometry and Visibility Info

Ephemeris Output● DEC, RA, Distance from Sun and Earth

● Magnitude, Tail Length, Tail orientation

● Phase Angle, Elongation

● Rise/Set Times, Time/Altitude for best

viewing

● Visibility compared to naked eye, binocular

thresholds

○ expressed as “effective” or corrected

magnitude

● Output computed daily or more frequently

Page 3: Comet Ephemerides with Geometry and Visibility Info

Visibility Computation

● Effective Magnitude Adjusted from Actual

Magnitude

○ compare to naked eye 6.0 threshold

● Effective Magnitude Adjustments

○ extinction

○ sky brightness (moonlight, twilight, daylight

at best observation time)

Page 4: Comet Ephemerides with Geometry and Visibility Info

Sky Brightness Computation

● Nighttime

○ moderate light pollution assumed,

increasing near horizon

○ increased by scattering/glare from the moon

● Twilight

○ empirical relationship of limiting magnitude

and comet/sun altitude difference

● Daytime

○ scattering/glare based on elongation from

sun, comet altitude and solar altitude

Page 5: Comet Ephemerides with Geometry and Visibility Info

Internet Demo?

http://laps.noaa.gov/cgi/albers.homepage.cgi

(optional)

Page 6: Comet Ephemerides with Geometry and Visibility Info

Visibility Examples● PANSTAARS reaching (barely) naked eye

magnitude limit in March

● Ikeya-Seki visible naked eye in Japan within

hours of perihelion, otherwise head was likely

invisible naked-eye (despite impressive tail)

● ISON orbit similar to Ikeya-Seki, though will be

dimmer and may never reach naked-eye

brightness

● Hale-Bopp longest most visible comet in last

50 years

● McNaught (2007) visible naked eye from

Longmont area in bright twilight, and in

binoculars during the daylight

Page 7: Comet Ephemerides with Geometry and Visibility Info

Sky Brightness Computation

● It’s fine to calculate sky brightness and

limiting magnitude at individual points in the

sky for an ephemeris, however…

● Wouldn’t it be nice to show an image of sky

brightness over the entire sky??

Page 8: Comet Ephemerides with Geometry and Visibility Info

Simulated All-Sky Images Compared with the LAS All-Sky

Camera

by Steve Albers, Vern Raben, and the NOAA LAPS Group

Page 9: Comet Ephemerides with Geometry and Visibility Info

Simulation Ingredients

● 3-D Gridded Cloud Analyses (or

forecasts)

○ Cloud liquid, ice, rain, snow,hail

○ NOAA’s LAPS model (developed at

ESRL)

● Locations of Sun, Moon, Planets, Stars

● Specification of Aerosols (haze)

● Specification of Light Pollution

● Specify Vantage Point

○ Latitude, Longitude, Elevation

Page 10: Comet Ephemerides with Geometry and Visibility Info

LAPS Cloud

analysis

METARMETAR

METAR

OAR/ESRL/GSD/Forecast Applications Branch 10

First Guess

Page 11: Comet Ephemerides with Geometry and Visibility Info

Visualization Technique

● Illumination of clouds, air, and terrain are pre-

computed

● Sky brightness based on sun, moon, planets,

stars

● Ray Tracing from Vantage Point to each sky

location

● Scattering by Intervening Clouds, Aerosols, Air

● Terrain shown where its along the line of sight

● Physically and Empirically based for best

efficiency

Page 12: Comet Ephemerides with Geometry and Visibility Info

Image Navigation● Overall correction based on optical axis centering,

spherical rotation, and radial lens “distortion”

• Need to rotate around Lambda Draconis?• Except that near horizon offsets are just in azimuth

(zenith rotation)

Page 13: Comet Ephemerides with Geometry and Visibility Info

Cloud Illumination Example

Cloud Illumination (and scattering)

Page 14: Comet Ephemerides with Geometry and Visibility Info

Nighttime Clouds (and stars)

Page 15: Comet Ephemerides with Geometry and Visibility Info

Background Sky Brightness

● Source can be sun or moon

● Rayleigh Scattering by Air Molecules (blue sky)

○ Minimum brightness 90 degrees from light

source

○ Blue-Green sky color near horizon far from

sun

● Mie Scattering by Aerosols (haze)

○ Brighter near the light source (aureole)

● Added sky brightness from planets, stars, light

pollution, airglow

Page 16: Comet Ephemerides with Geometry and Visibility Info

Daylight Clear Sky

Page 17: Comet Ephemerides with Geometry and Visibility Info

Nighttime Comparison

Page 18: Comet Ephemerides with Geometry and Visibility Info

Clear Air Illumination● Cloud shadows in clear air can show

crepuscular rays

● Brightness and color changes shown during

twilight

○ 3-D orientation of Earth’s shadow considered

○ Secondary scattering needed to reduce

contrast in Earth’s shadow that appears

opposite the sun

Page 19: Comet Ephemerides with Geometry and Visibility Info

Twilight Comparisons

Page 20: Comet Ephemerides with Geometry and Visibility Info

Twilight Comparisons

Page 21: Comet Ephemerides with Geometry and Visibility Info

Terrain Illumination

● Topography data allows showing mountains

near the horizon

● Terrain Albedo (e.g. a dark forest)

● Adjusted by cloud shadows

● Show snow cover (future enhancement)

● Terrain can be obscured by intervening clouds,

haze, or clear air (very long distances)

Page 22: Comet Ephemerides with Geometry and Visibility Info

Main Ray-Tracing Step● Trace from viewer into sky at ~1x1 degree grid

● Ray path travels through clear air, aerosols,

clouds, and may hit terrain

● First estimate is clear sky value (background

sky)

● Scattered by clouds (can show up either bright

or dark)

○ depends on optical depth of cloud and

elongation from sun, as well as pre-computed

cloud illumination

● Cloud/Aerosol scattering can obscure distant

terrain

Page 23: Comet Ephemerides with Geometry and Visibility Info

More on Cloud/Precip Scattering● Mie scattering phase function means thin clouds

are brighter near the sun (silver lining), cloud

corona

● Thick clouds are the opposite, being lit up better

when opposite the sun

● Rayleigh scattering by clear air can redden

distant clouds

● Future enhancement would be to add rainbows &

halos

○ (with clouds/precip at specific elongation

angles)

Page 24: Comet Ephemerides with Geometry and Visibility Info

Final Display

● Cylindrical grid (panoramic view) can be

calculated at either 1x1 or 0.5x0.5 degree

spacing

● Currently just shows at and above the horizon

○ future enhancement to show below the

horizon

● Convert to polar grid (shown here)

○ good for overhead views, and for camera

comparison

Page 25: Comet Ephemerides with Geometry and Visibility Info

Cylindrical Panoramic View (½ degree resolution)

Page 26: Comet Ephemerides with Geometry and Visibility Info

Example Animation #1

Page 27: Comet Ephemerides with Geometry and Visibility Info

Example Animation #2

Page 28: Comet Ephemerides with Geometry and Visibility Info

Internet Demo of All-sky Web page?

(optional)

http://laps.noaa.gov/allsky/allsky.cgi

Page 29: Comet Ephemerides with Geometry and Visibility Info

What’s next?

The sky is the limit!