Sinking Ship Effect Caused By Refraction
Skunkbay Timelapse
Below are high resolution versions of the available Skunk Bay peninsula scenes. The distant island is at times visible and invisible.
09/07/12 - On this day there was a mixture of sunken and visible effects
09/06/12 - On this day the peninsula was sunken throughout most of the day
09/01/12 - On this day the peninsula was visible throughout most of the day
What we learn:
- The sinking effect can happen for long periods of time over a single day
- The sinking effect is seen to happen repeatedly over multiple days, in all available timelapses of that peninsula
- In the sunken version of the scene there is a light line bordering the waterline where it otherwise should not be
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- In the sunken version the area above the line is vertically compressed
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- An inferior mirage is seen to compress and decompress from the light line
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Resources
Mirages in a Bottle
Link to Paper
Abstract: "A simple experiment is presented to visualize inferior and superior mirages in the laboratory. A quantitative analysis is done using ray tracing with both photographic and computational techniques. The mirage's image, as seen by the eye or the camera lens, can be used to analyze the deflection and inversion of light rays."