Le 4 mai 2021, la plateforme Yahoo Questions/Réponses fermera. Elle est désormais accessible en mode lecture seule. Aucune modification ne sera apportée aux autres sites ou services Yahoo, ni à votre compte Yahoo. Vous trouverez plus d’informations sur l'arrêt de Yahoo Questions/Réponses et sur le téléchargement de vos données sur cette page d'aide.
Why are mountain shadows always triangles?
I mean big mountain near daybreak or sunset. If you don't believe me, here are some pictures:
http://i125.photobucket.com/albums/p53/mkvispics/M...
http://epod.usra.edu/blog/2007/12/mountain-shadow-...
http://www.alpinestateofmind.com/gallery/6496951_G...
http://www.exo.net/~pauld/lectures/patternscostari... (scroll down a little)
**************************
My take is that this is similar to a picture of railroad tracks. ( http://farm3.static.flickr.com/2118/2203250246_af0... )
Parallel lines when mapped on to a 3D sphere converge
Here, it is the light rays going around the mountain that appear to converge. And most of the details of the mountain get wiped out. The general shape of the mountain only magnifies this effect.
The convergence of the sun's rays at the horizon are called anticrepuscular rays. Here is a good picture of this effect: http://antwrp.gsfc.nasa.gov/apod/ap060917.html . The big difference is when on a mountain, you are looking down on the anticrepuscular rays, not up at them.
4 réponses
- Scythian1950Lv 7il y a 1 décennieRéponse favorite
The 2nd picture unfortunately gives away the answer, so I can't take credit for a brilliantly insightful answer. It's a consequence of perspective, which "sharpens" peaks of mountains, even if their summits aren't necessarily very peak like. Let's say we have a "sloppy summit" mountain, like an asymmetrical pyramid with the top lopped off. It casts a shadow far into the horizon, and perhaps even beyond the horizon where it reduces light backscatter in the air in the distance. The summit irregularity by that time, in the great distance, will look very small to one standing on the summit. Hence, it's as if the silhouette of the mountain has been "pinched" at the top, so that such shadows of all mountains look about the same. You don't see this effect if the shadow is not far away, like, say, across a canyon.
You can make anyone look like a pinhead by same means of stretching the silhouette.
- il y a 1 décennie
because mountains are cone shaped which in a flat surface world look triangle i wont knock you for asking that question but its too easy lol.
- gintableLv 7il y a 1 décennie
Um...mountains are "triangles"...triangular in frontal shape.
Objects tend to cast shadows of their shape in some regards.