- Sylvanshine
Sylvanshine is an
optical phenomenon in which dew-covered trees ofspecies whose leaves are wax-covered retroreflect beams of light, as from a vehicle's headlights, sometimes causing trees to appear to be snow-covered at night during the summer. The phenomenon was named and explained in 1994 by Professor Alistair Fraser ofPennsylvania State University , an expert in meteorologicaloptics . According to his explanation, the wax on the leaves causes water to form beads, which become, in effect, lenses. These lenses focus the light to a spot on the surface of the leaf, and the image of this spot is directed as rays in the opposite direction.References
* Alistair B. Fraser, "The Sylvanshine: retroreflection in dew-covered trees", "Applied Optics", 33, 21, 4539–4547. 1994.
* Jan O. Mattsson and Lars Bärring, "Heiligenschein " and related phenomena in divergent light", "Applied Optics", 40, 27, 4709–4806. 2001.
* Ralf Lenke, Ulrich Mack, and Georg Maret, "Comparison of the 'glory' with coherent backscattering of light in turbid media", "Journal of Optics A: Pure and Applied Optics", 4, 309–314, 2002.
Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.