Downwelling spectral irradiance during evening twilight as a function of the lunar phase.
We measured downwelling spectral vector irradiance (from 350 to 800 nm) during evening civil and nautical twilight (solar elevation down to -12°). Nine sets of measurements were taken to cover the first half of the lunar cycle (from the new to full moon) and were also used to calculate chromaticity (CIE 1976 u'v'). The lunar phase had no consistent effect on downwelling irradiance until solar elevation was less than -8°. For lower solar elevations, the effect of the moon increased with the fraction of the illuminated lunar disk until the fraction was approximately 50%. For fractions greater than 50%, the brightness and chromaticity of the downwelling irradiance were approximately independent of the fraction illuminated, likely because the greater brightness of a fuller moon was offset by its lower elevation during twilight. Given the importance of crepuscular periods to animal activity, including predation, reproductive cycles, and color vision in dim light, these results may have significant implications for animal ecology.
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- Sunlight
- Stratospheric Ozone
- Reproduction
- Predatory Behavior
- Optics
- Optical Phenomena
- North Carolina
- Motion
- Moths
- Moon
Citation
Published In
DOI
EISSN
ISSN
Publication Date
Volume
Issue
Start / End Page
Related Subject Headings
- Sunlight
- Stratospheric Ozone
- Reproduction
- Predatory Behavior
- Optics
- Optical Phenomena
- North Carolina
- Motion
- Moths
- Moon