File:Scm.gif
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[edit]DescriptionScm.gif |
Fata Morgana of Santa Cruz shoreline as seen from Moss Landing. That animation shows how the land forms are changing due to a superior mirage. The time interval between the first and the last pictures is 33 minutes. Here's what Andy Young – a mirage specialist – says about the animation: "Well, this starts out as a classical superior mirage, with just one inverted image visible. (It's probably really a 3-image mirage, with the top erect image so compressed as to be invisible.) Then as the inversion becomes stronger, the 3rd image becomes prominently visible – and finally you get a 5-image mirage! A nice example indeed. In an intermediate stage, you get quite a nice Fata Morgana effect, with the stretched zones alternating with compressed ones. I am tempted to say that the magnification in the vertically stretched zone, between the horizon and the first inverted image, is due to the curvature of the Earth (and the inversion): the effective "reflecting" layer is concave downward, so it acts as a magnifying mirror. I think this would be Wegener's interpretation; but I should really do some simulations of these mirage to be sure this is even an approximately correct explanation. In this case, the two upper images would be interpreted as a reflection of the 3-image mirage in the closer part of the inversion – really a sort of "mirage of a mirage". |
Date | 05/07/2007 |
Source | Own work |
Author | Brocken Inaglory |
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Date/Time | Thumbnail | Dimensions | User | Comment | |
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current | 00:10, 8 May 2007 | 1,944 × 1,296 (9.69 MB) | Mbz1 (talk | contribs) | {{Information |Description= Superior [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mirage Mirage] of [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Point_Reyes_National_Seashore Point Reyes National Seashore] as seen from San Francisco. That animation shows how the land forms are cha |
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