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BA.net feedsburner Interesting Thing of the Day News 02/06/2008

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This network includes a single feed: the popular and highly regarded Interesting Thing of the Day. ITotD is a unique internet publishing project that's part blog, part museum, and part guidebook. Our ongoing series of articles covers a wide variety of interesting foods, places, gadgets, ideas, historical events, and other things of all kinds.

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Light Pollution / Urban assault on the night sky [Interesting Thing of the Day]

read moreSociety & CultureJoe KissellMon, 02 Jun 2008 02:00:01 -0500

I used to go for a walk every night. It was a pleasant habit—exercise, fresh air, quiet time alone to think. I made a point, whenever possible, of walking in an area away from the city lights, where the sky was dark enough that I could get a good look at the stars. I knew how to pick out some of the constellations, though I could never quite understand how anyone could see a goat or an archer in the patterns of stars. Seeing shapes in clouds is one thing, but mentally connecting the dots to form a complex picture didn’t really work for me. That’s not to say I didn’t see anything in the stars, though. As I looked at a particular star, I would think about the possibility of life in outer space, the chance that a planet circling that star may be home to people like me—or unfathomably different beings. I’d think about how Earth is just another one of those countless planets and the sun just another one of those countless stars. And picking my favorite star of the moment, I’d say to myself, “Someday I’ll find a way to go there.”

Looking at the stars and thinking about them in this way always had a very calming effect on me. I felt as though it gave me a sense of proportion, that it put my own crises and ambitions in perspective. It didn’t make me feel insignificantly small; instead, it made me feel somehow privileged to be able to see and understand what may be out there, and to realize I’m a part of something so big.

The Stars at Night Aren’t Big or Bright
Nowadays I don’t notice the stars very often, and when I do, I don’t usually think about them as I once did. But every now and then, I’ll be on a trip—an island, a desert, a rural getaway somewhere—and again the stars will catch my attention. Invariably I’ll wonder why I hadn’t noticed them in so long. Is it just that I’m older and busier? That may be part of it, but a bigger part is that the lights of the city often make it very hard to see the stars, always focusing my attention on the surface of my own planet. This is one consequence of the increasing problem of light pollution.

The term “pollution” is apt because excess or unwanted light can be an irritation or even a safety hazard. Like air pollution, light pollution is typically a by-product of machines and devices that were intended to make our lives easier, more convenient, and safer. Another similarity is that light pollution can be reduced greatly with careful attention to design. But because most people have become accustomed to light pollution as a fact of life, there is usually little incentive to worry about it when designing or purchasing lighting products.

It Was a Bright and Stormy Night
The most frequently discussed manifestation of light pollution is a phenomenon called skyglow—a layer of glowing air that obscures anything beyond it. Skyglow occurs because the atmosphere itself diffuses the light; the effect is strongest when lights point upward, and it’s exacerbated by moisture, pollution, and dust. If you ever look up into a clear night sky in the city and find that very few stars are visible, skyglow is the culprit. The effect is even more striking from a distance; if you’re outside the city in a darker area, you can often see skyglow as a glowing haze over the brightly lit area, even if the lights themselves are not visible.

There are other forms of light pollution as well. The term light trespass is used to describe light that shines onto someone else’s property. This can be a neighbor’s floodlight that shines into your backyard, for example, or a streetlight that shines into your window at night. Another type of light pollution is glare, a general term describing any kind of light that impairs or obscures one’s vision. Glare interferes with the eyes’ natural ability to adapt to lower light levels at night, and can pose a serious safety hazard—especially for drivers.

I Wear my Sunglasses at Night
Astronomers—both professional and amateur—have always found light pollution to be a serious problem. But stargazers are not the only ones affected. Biologists are increasingly concerned that light pollution is detrimental to wildlife—disrupting natural biological cycles, interfering with the hunting and feeding behaviors of nocturnal animals, and hindering the navigation of migrating birds. Humans may be directly affected as well: recent studies have suggested a connection between the use of electric lights at night and an increased risk of breast cancer. Even relatively small amounts of light reaching the eyes during sleep can throw off natural circadian rhythms, altering the body’s production of the sleep hormone melatonin and potentially leading to a variety of health problems.

Light pollution is a solvable problem. The basic principle is to use light at night only where and when it’s actually needed, and only in the amount needed. This may involve shielding light fixtures so that light is directed downward (and away from adjacent properties), putting lights on timers or motion-activated switches, or using lower-wattage bulbs. There’s also the radical notion of turning off outside lights at night. According to conventional wisdom, more light equals more safety, so presumably brighter places should have less crime than darker ones. But surprisingly, this is not necessarily the case. Several school districts, in an effort to save money on electricity, tried turning off outside lights on schools and playgrounds at night and found, counterintuitively, that vandalism rates plummeted. That’s not to say you should start walking down dark alleys at night, but then, I suppose even criminals need to be able to see what they’re doing.

Reducing light pollution is in some ways at odds with modern Western culture—especially when it comes to outdoor advertising and other commercial lighting. And no one is arguing that cities and towns would be safer or better places to live if the streets were completely dark. But even while we teach our children not to be afraid of the dark, we do our best to surround ourselves with light. Perhaps a bit more darkness wouldn’t be such a bad thing. It could turn out to be healthier and safer, not to mention providing some much-needed perspective. —Joe Kissell

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More Information about Light Pollution...

This article was featured in Carnival of the Green #36.

To read about the increasing number of fields represented in the anti-light-pollution movement, see Light Pollution Goes Mainstream by Richard Tresch Fienberg in Sky & Telescope.

The Danish site Light pollution or not, that is the question discusses the use of high-powered lighting devices (searchlights, lasers, etc.) for commercial advertising.

Other good sources for information on light pollution and what you can do about it include:

Information on how turning off lights at night has decreased vandalism in several school districts can be found in this article from Peninsula School District #401 in Gig Harbor, Washington.

Want to see what light pollution looks like from a satellite? Check out this image from NASA’s Astronomy Picture of the Day site, or for more details, see The night sky in the World Home Page.

The impact of light pollution on wildlife is discussed in Light Pollution Taking Toll on Wildlife, Eco-Groups Say by Sharon Guynup in National Geographic Today.

cover art

The book Light Pollution by Bob Mizon is a guide for astronomers frustrated with skyglow. If you want to teach children about light pollution, take a look at There Once Was a Sky Full of Stars by Bob Crelin (illustrated by Amie Ziner).

Related Articles from Interesting Thing of the Day

The excessive or injudicious use of lights at night can lead to several different forms of light pollution. Besides annoying stargazers whose view is obscured, it can cause safety hazards and even be dangerous to your health.

Red Tide / A beautiful and/or deadly aquatic phenomenon [Interesting Thing of the Day]

read moreScience & NatureJoe KissellThu, 29 May 2008 02:00:01 -0500

In the mid-1990s, I was living in San Diego. Because the place where I worked was near the ocean, barely a day went by when I didn’t walk along the beach or at least drive by it. One day, something looked a bit different—the water, normally greenish, had taken on a bit of a red hue. I heard a few people talking in passing about something called a “red tide,” as though it were a common occurrence that anyone who had lived there for more than a few months should be familiar with. It didn’t sound like anything I should be either worried about or especially interested in—just some random marine phenomenon, the details of which I was content not to know.

Light Waves
But driving home from work late that night I glanced at the waves breaking on the beach again and did a double take. I could have sworn I saw light coming from the water. Maybe it was just a reflection of the moon, I thought, or someone playing with a flashlight. I kept looking, and every few seconds I saw another glow of greenish light that lasted for just a second or two and then faded away. I pulled over and walked down to the water to take a closer look. Sure enough, every time the waves broke, the leading edge of the wave emitted a faint green glow. I stood there and stared at the water for the longest time—I thought it was one of the strangest and most beautiful things I’d ever seen.

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