MOONBOW PREDICTIONS FOR 2011
Click on pictures to list predictions for
Lower Yosemite Fall Upper
Yosemite Fall
Photo
by Robert Stavers Photo
by Brent Gilstrap
www.galleriehare.com http://groundhog.smugmug.com/Nature
based
on the methods described in this article:
"Moonbows over Yosemite," Sky & Telescope, May 2007
related
story with photo gallery:
http://www.txstate.edu/news/news_releases/news_archive/2007/04/Moonbow041207.html
related
story:
Beauty in the misty moonlight
By Eric Bailey
Aristotle took note of this celestial
happening a couple of millenniums back. Ben Franklin bagged a sighting or
two, as did Mark Twain. The venerable John Muir, chronicler of Sierra
mountaintop and meadow, waxed enthusiastic about the nighttime phenomenon.
The hunt for the elusive “moonbow” has long
been a nocturnal lure for dreamy hikers, insomniac seamen and intrepid
photo buffs. But in the past, seeing one of these nighttime rainbows –
caused when a full moon’s rays bounce off the mist of a departing rain
cloud or raging waterfall – has been dictated mostly by chance.
No longer.
A team of astronomers from Texas State
University in San Marcos has produced a computer model that can reliably
predict the date and duration of moonbows at Yosemite Falls, the national
park’s tallest and most photogenic waterfall.
Their predictions have sent waves of camera
buffs and Yosemite Valley visitors trekking up the trail to the plank
bridge near the base of the waterfall.
Aside from those who have visited during an
overcast night, few have come away disappointed.
“So far as we know, we’re the first to
predict dates and precise times for when moonbows will appear,” said Don
Olson, the Texas State astronomy professor who led a team of honors
students in the project. “It’s great for people who otherwise might have
sat around all night waiting to see a moonbow, and for the students it was
a nice exercise in calculus, spherical trig and computing.”
The team’s moonbow table took Brent
Gilstrap to the waterfall one recent night.
Gilstrap, who two years ago chucked his
computer software career to become a commercial landscape photographer,
has been dependably making spectacular shots of moonbows ever since he
learned of the Texas State lunar table.
What may be his most remarkable moonbow
photo came not at the fall’s base but across the valley on a cloudless
night last year. Gilstrap caught a broad panorama: the entire Yosemite
Falls cascading down with a moonbow arching across mist halfway up the
sheer cliff face, the whole scene reflected in mirrored waters of
a flooded meadow.
On a recent and far less perfect night, the
moon was dodging in and out of a gauzy bank of high clouds preceding a
spring storm that hit the next day. By 10 p.m. the moonbow was a ghostly
arch floating above the creek’s granite rubble.
“Honestly, it was pretty lousy until a few
minutes ago,” Gilstrap yelled above the roar of the waterfall, his parka
whipping in the rush of wind and mist coursing down the gorge.
At any one time during the course of the
evening, a dozen people paused to take in the nighttime spectacle.
John Wolfarth, visiting from Boston,
wasn’t disappointed.
“Oh, there it is! There it is! There it
is!” he yelled to his friend Kevin Powers. “That’s amazing!”
Bruce Wang, a 28-year-old UC San Francisco
medical student, had driven four hours from the Bay Area just to
photograph the moonbow.
He arrived at 5 p.m., spent hours making
moonbow shots with his tripod-mounted camera, then at 11 p.m. packed up to
head home.
“Hopefully I’ll be home by 2:30 a.m., get a
few hours sleep and get to classes by 10 a.m.,” he said. “I’m just lucky
enough to live close enough to do this. It’s a really cool
natural phenomenon.”
Olson said he had known about moonbows
since his days in the graduate program at UC Berkeley and had long been
mulling a project to create a table tracking their appearances.
The opportunity presented itself in 2005,
when he and Texas State lecturer Russell Doescher arrived in the valley
with a team of students.
With the water low, they could venture into
the creek bed below Yosemite Falls to make the measurements needed to
plot important factors for moonbow observations, including the true
horizon of Yosemite Valley’s southern cliffs, which can block
a moonrise.
Back at the university, Olson, Doescher and
students Kellie Beicker, Ashley Ralph and Hui-Yiing Chang from the
school’s Mitte Honors program crafted a computer model factoring in
the various earthbound and celestial coordinates. They conducted
real-world tests in 2006 that proved their calculations were spot on.
This year they went public, writing an
article for May’s Sky and Telescope magazine and posting on the
university’s website a schedule of moonbows anticipated in the mist of
Lower Yosemite Fall.
A little luck is still needed. A good
moonbow requires clear sky, abundant mist at the base of the fall, an
absence of artificial light and what Olson calls the correct
“rainbow geometry.”
The predictions have sparked a sort of
moonbow renaissance at the park. Well-known photographer Keith Walklet has
conducted moonbow workshops and offers photo tips on the Ansel Adams
Gallery
website at www.anseladams.com/content/newsletter/lunar_rainbow.html.
The moonbow, also known as a lunar rainbow
and moon rainbow, isn’t unique to Yosemite Falls. Photographers have shot
them arching in the mist of other waterfalls around the valley. In fact,
Olson said, any big waterfall will suffice, provided it is roaring
with spring snowmelt and correctly positioned to snag the moon’s rays.
Moonbow tours are common at Africa’s
Victoria Falls. They’re a ritual at Cumberland Falls in Kentucky, where
early postcards show a hotel named the Moonbow Inn. Niagara Falls, Olson
said, was known for spectacular moonbows before electricity put its rushing
waters under a perpetual spotlight.
If you can’t get to Yosemite or other
moonbow hotbeds, Olson has a simple solution.
The next time a full moon rises in the
night sky, grab a backyard garden hose and turn on the tap.
Keep the glowing lunar face to your back,
and a fine mist sprayed skyward will produce an arch of luminescence, a
homemade moonbow.
The schedule of moonbows can be found
online at uweb.txstate.edu/do01.
Brent Gilstrap’s moonbow photographs are
online at
http://groundhog.smugmug.com/Nature
-
- - -
- - -
- - - -
LINKS
Texas State University Honors Program
http://www.txstate.edu/honors/
Sky & Telescope
http://www.skyandtelescope.com/
Don Olson, Physics Department, Texas State University
http://uweb.txstate.edu/~do01/
Marilynn Olson, English Department, Texas State University
http://www.english.txstate.edu/people-contacts/faculty/olson.html
Christopher Olson, JD, Hawaii Lawyer, Oahu Lawyer, Oahu,
Hawaii
http://hawaiiattorneyonline.com/