Glory (optical phenomenon)

Missing image
Glory_kaler_big.jpg
NASA photo

A glory is an optical phenomenon produced by light reflected toward its source by a cloud of uniformly-sized water droplets. A glory can have multiple colored rings. The angular size is much smaller than a rainbow, about 5° to 20°, depending on the size of the droplets. Since it is seen in the direction opposite the sun it is most commonly observed while airborne, with the glory surrounding the airplane's shadow on clouds.

A historical name for this phenomenon is the Brocken Specter or Specter of the Brocken. The name derives from the Brocken, the tallest peak of the Harz mountain range in Germany. Because the peak is above the cloud level, and the area is frequently misty, the condition of a shadow cast onto a cloud layer is relatively favored. The appearance of giant shadows that seemed to move by themselves due to the movement of the cloud layer (this movement is another part of the definition of the Brocken Specter), and which were surrounded by optical glory halos, may have contributed to the reputation the Harz mountains hold as a refuge for witches and evil spirits. In Goethe's Faust, the Brocken is called the Blocksberg and is the site of the Witches' Sabbath on Walpurgis Night.

C. T. R. Wilson saw a glory while working as a temporary observer at the Ben Nevis weather station. Inspired by the impressive sight, he decided to build a device for creating clouds in the laboratory, so that he could make a synthetic, small-scale glory. His work led directly to the cloud chamber, a device for detecting ionizing radiation.

In China, this phenomenon is called the Buddha's light (佛光). They were often observed on cloud shrouded high mountains such as Huang shan and Mount Emei. Records of the phenomenon at Mount Emei dated back to 63 A.D. Since the colorful halo always surrounds the observer's own shadow, it was often a source of the observer's personal enlightenment associated with Buddha or something divine until modern science explained the optics behind the phenomenon.

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