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Lunar Skylight Polarization Signal Polluted by Urban Lighting Christopher Kyba 1,2 , Thomas Ruhtz 1 , Jürgen Fischer 1 , Franz Hölker 2 1 Freie Universität Berlin 2 Leibniz-Institute of Freshwater Ecology and Inland Fisheries 11th Dark Sky Symposium, Osnabruck Oct 6, 2011

Lunar Skylight Polarization Signal Polluted by Urban Lighting Christopher Kyba 1,2, Thomas Ruhtz 1, Jürgen Fischer 1, Franz Hölker 2 1 Freie Universität

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Page 1: Lunar Skylight Polarization Signal Polluted by Urban Lighting Christopher Kyba 1,2, Thomas Ruhtz 1, Jürgen Fischer 1, Franz Hölker 2 1 Freie Universität

Lunar Skylight Polarization Signal Polluted by Urban Lighting

Christopher Kyba1,2, Thomas Ruhtz1, Jürgen Fischer1, Franz Hölker2

1Freie Universität Berlin2Leibniz-Institute of Freshwater Ecology and

Inland Fisheries

11th Dark Sky Symposium, Osnabruck Oct 6, 2011

Page 2: Lunar Skylight Polarization Signal Polluted by Urban Lighting Christopher Kyba 1,2, Thomas Ruhtz 1, Jürgen Fischer 1, Franz Hölker 2 1 Freie Universität

Verlust der Nacht(Loss of the Night)

• Collaboration of 9 Universities / Institutes

• 14 Integrated Subprojects

• Many aspects of light pollution considered, from measurement to ecology to sociology

Page 3: Lunar Skylight Polarization Signal Polluted by Urban Lighting Christopher Kyba 1,2, Thomas Ruhtz 1, Jürgen Fischer 1, Franz Hölker 2 1 Freie Universität

http://userpage.fu-berlin.de/~kyba/Light pollution conferences

Twitter: @skyglowberlinYoutube: skyglowberlin

Page 4: Lunar Skylight Polarization Signal Polluted by Urban Lighting Christopher Kyba 1,2, Thomas Ruhtz 1, Jürgen Fischer 1, Franz Hölker 2 1 Freie Universität

Outline

• Polarization of light

• Nocturnal insect navigation

• Experiment setup

• Results and interpretation

• Ecological consequences

Page 5: Lunar Skylight Polarization Signal Polluted by Urban Lighting Christopher Kyba 1,2, Thomas Ruhtz 1, Jürgen Fischer 1, Franz Hölker 2 1 Freie Universität

How does light become polarized?

• Polarization is a characteristic of light

• Most sources produce unpolarized light

• Horizontally polarized light generated by reflections

• Linearly polarized light generated through Rayleigh scattering

Page 6: Lunar Skylight Polarization Signal Polluted by Urban Lighting Christopher Kyba 1,2, Thomas Ruhtz 1, Jürgen Fischer 1, Franz Hölker 2 1 Freie Universität

How does light become polarized?

Page 7: Lunar Skylight Polarization Signal Polluted by Urban Lighting Christopher Kyba 1,2, Thomas Ruhtz 1, Jürgen Fischer 1, Franz Hölker 2 1 Freie Universität

Nocturnal Navigation

Dacke et al. 2003

• Dung beetles navigate using the polarized sky light of the moon

• Signal strength seven orders of magnitude smaller than in daytime

Page 8: Lunar Skylight Polarization Signal Polluted by Urban Lighting Christopher Kyba 1,2, Thomas Ruhtz 1, Jürgen Fischer 1, Franz Hölker 2 1 Freie Universität

Properties of sky polarization

• Degree of linear pol. is strongest at twilight• Twilight band of maximum polarization

runs approximately North/South• Moonlight polarization pattern almost

identical to sunlight p.p. (Gál et al. 2001)• Polarization pattern is visible in partly

cloudy skies (Pomozi et al. 2001)

=> Polarization is a more robust directional signal than the sun, moon, or stars

Page 9: Lunar Skylight Polarization Signal Polluted by Urban Lighting Christopher Kyba 1,2, Thomas Ruhtz 1, Jürgen Fischer 1, Franz Hölker 2 1 Freie Universität

Experimental Setup

• Berlin is at 52oN• North Star is 38o from zenith• Moon’s max deviation from

ecliptic is 18o-28o

• Moon is always 62o to 118o from North Star (66o to 114o in 2010)

• North Star is always near peak of Rayleigh polarization

• Geometry is independent of position on Earth, and changes a few degrees/day

Page 10: Lunar Skylight Polarization Signal Polluted by Urban Lighting Christopher Kyba 1,2, Thomas Ruhtz 1, Jürgen Fischer 1, Franz Hölker 2 1 Freie Universität

Measurement Locations

50 km

• Compare lunar skylight polarization at urban and rural location

• Brandenburg is very dark compared to Berlin

N

Page 11: Lunar Skylight Polarization Signal Polluted by Urban Lighting Christopher Kyba 1,2, Thomas Ruhtz 1, Jürgen Fischer 1, Franz Hölker 2 1 Freie Universität

Measurement equipmentSigma 24mm f1.8

tripod

SC4022LPFCFW-8

Blue Red

Note: Measure each LPF position (at least) 4x for each filter

Page 12: Lunar Skylight Polarization Signal Polluted by Urban Lighting Christopher Kyba 1,2, Thomas Ruhtz 1, Jürgen Fischer 1, Franz Hölker 2 1 Freie Universität

Skyglow pollutes lunar polarization signal!

Degree of linear polarization

Urban moonrise: 3.9 ± 0.2%Urban with moon: 11.3 ± 0.3%Rural moon: 29.2 ± 0.8%Urban daytime: 56.6 ± 1.0%Laboratory (LCD): 98.1 ± 1.2%

Page 13: Lunar Skylight Polarization Signal Polluted by Urban Lighting Christopher Kyba 1,2, Thomas Ruhtz 1, Jürgen Fischer 1, Franz Hölker 2 1 Freie Universität

Skyglow pollutes lunar polarization signal!

Degree of linear polarizationUrban no moon: 8.6 ± 0.3%Urban moonrise: 3.9 ± 0.2%Urban with moon: 11.3 ± 0.3%Rural moon: 29.2 ± 0.8%Urban daytime: 56.6 ± 1.0%Laboratory (LCD): 98.1 ± 1.2%

?!?!?

Page 14: Lunar Skylight Polarization Signal Polluted by Urban Lighting Christopher Kyba 1,2, Thomas Ruhtz 1, Jürgen Fischer 1, Franz Hölker 2 1 Freie Universität

Should skyglow be polarized?

• Most sources of light pollution are unpolarized

• Horizontally polarized light scattered upwards

• Rayleigh scattering can direct light downwards

• Sources of light pollution are spatially distributed

• Light pollution is generally uncollimated

Page 15: Lunar Skylight Polarization Signal Polluted by Urban Lighting Christopher Kyba 1,2, Thomas Ruhtz 1, Jürgen Fischer 1, Franz Hölker 2 1 Freie Universität

Naively, no

Page 16: Lunar Skylight Polarization Signal Polluted by Urban Lighting Christopher Kyba 1,2, Thomas Ruhtz 1, Jürgen Fischer 1, Franz Hölker 2 1 Freie Universität

What do simulations say?

• Skyglow simulations describe propagation of light from sources to observer

• Most do not take polarization into account

• The simulation that does (Kerola 2006) predicts that skyglow is almost unpolarized (~2%)

Aubé 2007

Page 17: Lunar Skylight Polarization Signal Polluted by Urban Lighting Christopher Kyba 1,2, Thomas Ruhtz 1, Jürgen Fischer 1, Franz Hölker 2 1 Freie Universität

But skyglow can be polarized!

• Moonless, clear sky observing conditions

• Similar values observed several months apart

• Results for one particular direction in one city

Degree of linear polarization370-510 nm: 10.1 ± 0.5%490-580 nm: 9.4 ± 0.7%590-690 nm: 8.5 ± 1.4%370-700 nm: 8.6 ± 0.3%

Page 18: Lunar Skylight Polarization Signal Polluted by Urban Lighting Christopher Kyba 1,2, Thomas Ruhtz 1, Jürgen Fischer 1, Franz Hölker 2 1 Freie Universität

How can this be?

Page 19: Lunar Skylight Polarization Signal Polluted by Urban Lighting Christopher Kyba 1,2, Thomas Ruhtz 1, Jürgen Fischer 1, Franz Hölker 2 1 Freie Universität

Ecological consequences

• Nocturnal insect navigation– dung beetles– crickets?– moths?– bees?

• Bird attraction to searchlights?

Dacke et al. 2003

Page 20: Lunar Skylight Polarization Signal Polluted by Urban Lighting Christopher Kyba 1,2, Thomas Ruhtz 1, Jürgen Fischer 1, Franz Hölker 2 1 Freie Universität

Conclusions

• Skyglow pollutes the natural polarization signal of the moon

• Extremely likely to affect navigational abilities of some nocturnal insects

• Skyglow itself can be weakly polarized

• Skyglow polarization could be used for remote sensing of aerosols at night

Page 21: Lunar Skylight Polarization Signal Polluted by Urban Lighting Christopher Kyba 1,2, Thomas Ruhtz 1, Jürgen Fischer 1, Franz Hölker 2 1 Freie Universität

Acknowledgements

Photo CreditsTable: Briho (Wikimedia Commons)

Sky: Christopher KybaDragonfly: Andreas Trepte (WC)Waggle dance: Jüppsche (WC)

Skyglow: Jeremy StanleyGlacier National Park: Ray Stinson

New York City: CharlieBrown7034 (WC)Light pollution map: WEW/FU Berlin

Light pollution model: Martin Aubé (2007)

FundingBMBF 033L038A

MILIEU (FU Berlin)

Page 22: Lunar Skylight Polarization Signal Polluted by Urban Lighting Christopher Kyba 1,2, Thomas Ruhtz 1, Jürgen Fischer 1, Franz Hölker 2 1 Freie Universität

Thank you!

Page 23: Lunar Skylight Polarization Signal Polluted by Urban Lighting Christopher Kyba 1,2, Thomas Ruhtz 1, Jürgen Fischer 1, Franz Hölker 2 1 Freie Universität

Polarization of daytime skylight

Rayleigh scattering

(Pomozi et al. 2001)

Page 24: Lunar Skylight Polarization Signal Polluted by Urban Lighting Christopher Kyba 1,2, Thomas Ruhtz 1, Jürgen Fischer 1, Franz Hölker 2 1 Freie Universität

Measuring Stokes Vector

When this is done for every pixel, you have imaging polarimetry

Page 25: Lunar Skylight Polarization Signal Polluted by Urban Lighting Christopher Kyba 1,2, Thomas Ruhtz 1, Jürgen Fischer 1, Franz Hölker 2 1 Freie Universität

SearchlightsVisual brightness

(blue band)Degree of

linear polarization

Page 26: Lunar Skylight Polarization Signal Polluted by Urban Lighting Christopher Kyba 1,2, Thomas Ruhtz 1, Jürgen Fischer 1, Franz Hölker 2 1 Freie Universität

Animal use of polarized light:Migration

• Birds use polarization cues to re-calibrate their magnetic compass daily

• Average of sunset and sunrise is true North, and independent of latitude and time of year

• Experiments hold birds in altered magnetic field during twilight

• Birds look for this cue preferably at the horizon

Mulheim et al. 2006Cochran et al. 2004

Page 27: Lunar Skylight Polarization Signal Polluted by Urban Lighting Christopher Kyba 1,2, Thomas Ruhtz 1, Jürgen Fischer 1, Franz Hölker 2 1 Freie Universität

Animal use of polarized light:Material detection

• Water detection is most well known use

• Leads to “polarized light pollution” from artificial surface reflections (Horváth et al. 2009)

• Acquatic animals also use it in hunting