Newsgroups: lter.ced
Path: LTERnet!news
From: "Bruce P. Hayden" <bph@virginia.edu>
Subject: CED 4.7
Message-ID: <1995Aug15.184045.18023@lternet.washington.edu>
Sender: news@lternet.washington.edu
Organization: Long Term Ecological Research
Date: Tue, 15 Aug 1995 18:29:02 GMT

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  Vol.4  No.7      :::       August      :::    August 15, 1994

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CED METADATA ---- CED is the Climate/Ecosystem Dynamics bulletin board of
the LTER network. In CED, you will find exchanges of ideas, information,
data, bibliographies, literature discussions, and a place to find experts
within the LTER community.  We are interested in both climate controls on
ecosystems and ecosystem controls on climate.  As this is an
inter-disciplin- ary activity, we hope to provide things that you might not
come across in your work at your LTER site.

CED is a product of the LTER climate committee and contributions to CED for
general e-mail release may be sent to either David Greenland of Andrews
LTER [Greenlan@oregon.uoregon.edu] or to Bruce Hayden of the Virginia Coast
Reserve LTER [bph@Virginia.edu].  We expect that the scope of CED will
evolve and reflect the interests of the contributors and users of this
service.  CED will be issued as the preparation work gets done (usually
monthly).  Back-issues of CED may be requested from Ray Bero
[helper@LTERnet.edu] by the file name given in the masthead.Daniel can also
add people to the CED mailing list.

Feedback on CED from LTER scientists is welcome (non-$$$$ contributions
also welcome.)  For example, please forward citations of climate &
ecosystem publications on your site.  We are keeping a LTER wide
bibliography on Climate/Ecosystem Dynamics that we pass on via E-mail.


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      ***                           FRASER                          ***
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Much of this issue of CED comes from a real science hero: Alistair B.
Fraser.  Alistair teaches, I mean really teaches, at Penn State.  In this
issue, CED reviews some of his work at the interface between plants and
atmospheric optics and rain that doesn't reach the ground.

Here is Alistair's short autobiography -- "Alistair B. Fraser is a
Professor of Meteorology at the Pennsylvania State University. He started
his professional career with the Canadian Government as a weather
forecaster in Vancouver before returning to school to gain a Ph.D. in
Meteorology from the Imperial College of the University of London.

He is an enthusiastic teacher and in his search for more effective ways to
communicate to his students has made extensive use of the computer in the
classroom. He is the co-author of a textbook and has published research in
cloud physics, radiative transfer, artificial intelligence, and social
history. He has been awarded a patent. He has prepared scientific exhibits
for science museums and a history exhibit for a history museum. His
writings for popular consumption have appeared in publications ranging from
the Reader's Digest to the Scientific American. His photographs of weather
phenomena have appeared in newspapers, magazines, books, exhibits and on
television specials."

[http://www.ems.psu.edu/~fraser/BadMeteorology.html] is his home page!
Power up your NETSCAPE and don't miss a hypertext fork in the superhighway.
This one is special.

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      ***                   VIRGA, aka Fallstriefen                 ***
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Streaks or wisps of water or ice particles falling out of a cloud but
evaporating before reaching the earth's surface.  Definition from the
Glossary of Meteorology, an AMS-you-should-have-it-on-your-shelf book for
sure.  Another definition is "Once in a while, rain is seen to fall out of
clouds and evaporate completely before it reaches the ground."  If you have
not seen virga take in Jim Gosz's lightning talk.  SEV is VIRGA-city.  When
looking across the expanse of Sevilleta National Wildlife Refuge one might
see dark streaks from the bottom of such clouds only to seem to disappear,
i.e. become brighter before the ground is reached.  So Virga is not the
dark fall streaks extending from the bottom of the clouds but the
termination of said streaks -- the place where there is a sudden change in
the brightness shaft of the precipitation.  Weather geeks talk so cool.

Has the virga explanation ever been put to scientific test or is it just
loved natural history.  Fraser and Bohren (1992) say it was never tested!
See Monthly Weather Review 120:1565-1571.  Fraser and Bohren contest the
current explanation and offer two new explanations!  Good science skeptics
are really a lot of fun.  If you have doubts about skeptics being fun,
antiskeptics do but shouldn't, you really should check into NETSCAPE and
tune in to Fraser's homepage.  This is a home page worthy of you
bookmarking it.  Go down every hypertext trail. Don't miss anything in this
homepage!

Fraser and Bohren's problem with existing natural history theory is that it
implies a sharp break in optical thickness from visible rain to invisible
water vapor as evaporation proceeds.  Measurements indicate that optical
thickness on progressing down the rain shaft does not change abruptly but
gradually from cloud base to the ground.  So new science theory is needed.
They offer two.

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      ***                  MELTING SNOWFLAKES THEORY                ***
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Consider a snowflake falling into warmer air (>0 C).  It melts and there is
a transition in the precipitation shaft.  It switches from a snowshaft to a
rainshaft.  Optical cross section can be reduced by a factor of about 2.
And because drops fall faster than crystals the optical cross section is
reduced even more as they speed up on passing from snowshaft to rainshaft.
Put the two together and the reduction in optical density is 10X.  Dendrite
or star flakes have higher optical densities than drops made from the said
crystal fall very slowly and so dendritic snow shafts are very dark and
when they fall and melt the optical density declines a whole lot, like 20X.
You can see right through the rainshaft below the snowhaft.

If there were a grauple shaft extending down from a cloud and the grouple
melted there would be almost no observed virga because the drop size and
fall rate of grouple and the resulting rain drop are nearly the same.

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      ***               THE SLOW PRECIPITATION THEORY               ***
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The idea here is that visible precipitation shaft from the bottom of the
cloud is getting to the ground but is falling so slow that, well, it just
isn't there yet.  Wait and watch and maybe it will reach the ground.
Consider a 1 mm drop.  It falls until it reaches its terminal velocity 400
cm per second (not so fast!)  If cloud base is 3000 m, it would take about
750 seconds to get to the ground.  Divide by 60 and you get 125 minutes or
2 hours and 5 minutes.  Now if the drop is falling through non-saturated
air (RH <100%) more water molecules will leave the drop than condense on it
and thus there is a net change in favor of evaporation.  Smaller drops fall
even slower!  Will the drop every get to the ground?  If RH at the ground =
0% then no drop would make it.  SEV can have dry air and so SEV falling
drops get small fast and the rain might be visible as a shaft but sort of
hang there falling slower than your eyes can see!  Now if the downdraft in
the shaft is greater than the terminal velocity of the falling drops, drops
tend to accumulate at the downdraft leading edge giving a sharp change in
optical depth.

Multiple causality buffs can go for the melting snowflake and/or slow
precipitation combo-theory!  The Fraser/Bohren article in MWR is titled Is
Virga Rain That Evaporates before Reaching the Ground?  Fraser and Bohren
use article titles to attract readers.  Pick up the next issue of your
favorite journal that crosses your desk and see how many articles seem
designed to turn you off.   The seem to yell "DON'T READ ME!"  consider
another of Fraser's gems: The sylvanshine: retroreflection from dew-covered
trees.  Here is a Bohren contribution "Vertical elliptical coronas caused
by pollen."  Even if you don't know what a vertical elliptical coronas are
you still want to read this kind of stuff.

Alistair B. Fraser, 1991:A Canadian Flag for Canada. Journal of Canadian
Studies, 25(4):64-80.  Anyone who can write a 16 page paper on this subject
can't be all bad.

Alistair B. Fraser, 1995: Transforming chalk dust into mouse droppings. EMS
Bulletin, 64(1): (in print).  This is about teaching.  If you want to know
how much work it is to be a great teacher look at Fraser's stuff on his
homepage!  "Mouse droppings" is a euphemism classroom heroism.

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      ***                  SYLVANSHINE BEFORE DAWN                  ***
      ***                 HEILIGENSCHEIN AFTER DAWN                 ***
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Sylvanshine: retroreflection from dew-covered trees.  Fraser, A. B. (1994).
Applied Optics 33(21):4539-4547.  Doing some of my summer work in the
Physics library I bumped into this title.  I quickly found page 4539 and
thought -- what a CED gem!  The meaning of sylvanshine should be dopped-out
and known to you by now if you can do the transference from sunshine to
sylvanshine!

Fraser's little poem to start off this paper is so good that he must have
made it all up!

       Get up, sweet-Slug-a-bed, and see
       The Dew-bespangling Herbe and Tree

                          Robert Herrick (1591-1674)
                          Corinna's Going a Maying


Fraser is a lover of meteorological optics.  He has been at it a long time
and he is very good at it.  Fraser discovered sylvanshine at 1:00 AM on 12
August 1984 between Nakusp and New Denver, British Columbia.  On that warm
summer night he looked through the windshield of his car and saw the
"normally Stygian forest began to glow as if snow covered in the
moonlight."  The sylvanshine continued for mile after mile.  In 1989 he
drove across Ontario and the trees glowed for hours ended by dawns early
light!

Jerry Franklin has his new tower towering over one of  his old growth
spots.  He needs to get his camera (he always has it), a car headlight
quality torch, a sleeping bag and self-permission to spend a good dark
humid night out on the arm of his beloved tower.  This is a species
specific problem and the arm of the tower should point in the direction of
douglas firs, hemlocks or red or yellow cedars and gaze along the path
blazed by his light in search of sylvanshine.  Norway spruce, even if Jerry
had some wouldn't work!  Fine plates in Vol. 33 no. 21 Applied Optics to
encourage sylvanshine seeker.

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      ***                    FIRST, HEILIGENSHEIN                   ***
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In the "Memoirs of Benvenuto Cellini, 1562," Ben writes "shining light . .
. seen over my shadow . . . and it appears to the greatest advantage when
the grass is moist with dew."  Ben attributed his early morning halo to
"the wondrous ways of [God's] providence toward me."  Ben then would invite
friends for morning walks to show off his god given halo.  Fraser comments
that "presumably none of those knaves had the gall to point out that each
saw it around the head of his own shadow.  Ben saw Heiligenshein, aka the
light of the holy one.

Heiligenshein concerns the anti-solar point.  It works like this: the sun,
usually at a low angle hits you in the back of the head.  Your shadow-head
is cast on the ground. The dew drops around your shadow head are not so far
off the anti-solar point the photons can enter these drops, reflect of the
inside of the drop walls and come back to your eyes.  There is no way Ben
could see the Heiligenshein of others! and others could not see Ben's.  It
is one of those Gee!-Did-you-see-that? phenomena.  The knaves saw no halo
on Ben but on themselves? You bet.

In 1874 a chap by the name of Lommel suggested that the dew drop acted like
a lens and if the drop was 1 focal length above the leaf the light would
come back to the Heiligenshein-seer's eyes.  Getting 1 focal length above
the leaf required trichomatous leaf surfaces.  Later it was discovered that
the trichomes were not needed at all.  If the drop could sit on the leaf
with a contact angle of Pi and the light would enter the drop at an angle
of Pi/3 with respect to the leaf, by internal reflections in the drop, the
photons would come back to the eye of the beholder.  If the leaf is of the
right nature and can hold a drop up high on its surface so that it makes
contact with the leaf at just the right contact angle then you see God's
halo around your shadow head!

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      ***                       NOW SYLVANSHINE                     ***
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Sylvanshine and heiligenshein are nearly the same thing and they would be
the same thing if we could put ourselves way on the other side of the sun
to do the observing of sylvanshine.  In sylvanshine there is no halo.
Sorry, Jerry.  You look down the bore of your power-flashlight or along the
beam of your headlight and the back reflection of light from within the dew
drops making just the right contact angle with the leaves illuminates the
dew drop festooned trees.  Were it not summer you would think the trees all
frosted!

The best contact angle for drop and leaf in sylvanshine is 140 degrees. The
back reflected light is brightest then.  This angle depends on the
wettability of the leaf and this varies with the genes of the plant.
Cuticle and its waxes are in the story now.   When the leaves have only a
patchy layer of amorphous wax the contact angle is 80 to 90 degrees and you
get not so bright sylvanshine.  With complete coverage you get a contact
angle between 90 and 110 degrees and like skis it depends on the kind of
wax.  For contact angles higher than 110 degrees  you need a crystalline
wax on the surface that is known as epicuticular wax.

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      ***                    WOULD Butch-wax WORK?                  ***
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Epicuticular was is often made up of extruded rods a few tenths of a
micrometer in diameter and many times that length.  Plants with this
pure-bred epicuticular rodded wax tend to have a blue cast to them as the
rod diameters is less than the wavelength of the light and blue light is
scattered.  Blue spruce is an example.  You don't want that dull
sylvanshine you get from a shinny waxed surface.  Rodded waxed surfaces
vary from species to species and within species from place to place and
from time to time.  Plant with these rods not only appear to have a blue
cast but the also do not absorb UV.  Perhaps these waxy rods evolved to
abate the UV load and protect the DNA.  Isn't this a great story!

The right plants are blue spruce, hemlock, juniper, arborvitae, Douglas fir
and Fraser fir.  Norway spruce doesn't work.  Good shrubs are barberry,
yew, rhododendron, snowmound and coral berry.  The best herbs are crown
vetch and dianthus.  Remember epicuticular was is easily damaged, i.e. your
fingers can mush down all those rods and the sylvanshine goes out!

You will be happy to know that NSF supported this work with ATM-8917596.

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      ***                        ARBOREAL DEW                       ***
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Arboreal dew is something new to most of us.  Walks on dewy days results in
wet shoes but it is rare that that the trees also are dew bedecked. How
often can you remember the frozen form of dew (frost) on both the ground
and on the canopy?  Not often.  The well known nocturnal inversion mandates
that it is coldest at the ground and it gets warmer with height above the
surface.  Consider a July night, say 10 PM, with dew on the ground the
temperature gradient above the ground from 2.5 to 30 cm is 165 C/100 m and
from 30 to 120 cm it is +36 C / 100 m.  So if there is dew at 2.5 cm and
the temperature there is the same as the dewpoint temperature, then at 30
cm above the temperature is warmer by 0.5 C and the relative humidity is
then less than 100% and evaporation exceeds condensation and the dew either
will not form or it will quickly evaporate.  In the first 20 meters above
the ground temperature at night can warm 6 to 7 C.  So if dew is so hard to
come by in the canopy how do you get it?  First it could be pseudo-dew.  If
a fog or cloud passed through a canopy dew-like drops could be deposited on
the leaves.  The coastal coniferous forests of the West Coast would be a
good place to find this pseudo-dew.  To get real dew, drops coming into
being right on the leaves, you first cool down the plant surfaces then
advect a warmer, moister air mass over the area.  Condensation and dew will
form everywhere the surface is colder than the dewpoint of the advected air
blown in!  Sylvanshine is best searched for on herbaceous, small stature
plants with the right kind of waxy surfaces.  Else, as Fraser suggests,
take a sprayer filled with water, select the right plant material, spray
away, stand back and turn your headlights on your self-misted sylvanshine
creation.  This Jerry Franklin could do in his canopy without staying the
night!

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      ***                    WHAT FRASER LIKES                      ***
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It has been a pleasure to introduce CED readers to Fraser of Penn State and
to egg you on to looking at his home page.  Consider the following which
Fraser likes.  It may amuse you as well.



                            Be very, very careful
                              what you put into that head,
                                because you will never,
                                   ever get it out.
                                      Cardinal Wolsey
                                       (1475?-1530)

                                           **********

                   A University is what a College becomes
                           when it stops paying attention to its students.
                                   John Ciardi (1916-1986)

                                           **********

                      Certifications are the devices we employ
                           to convince others of our competence
                              when they otherwise would
                                  have little cause to believe in it.
                                        A.B.F.

=========================================================================
|       Bruce P. Hayden                                                 |
|       University of Virginia                                          |
|       Department of Environmental Sciences                            |
|       Charlottesville, VA 22903                                       |
|                                                                       |
|
------------------------------------------------------------------------|
|       804-924-0545 (o); 804-924-7761(d); 804-982-2137(FAX)            |
|       bph@virginia.edu; bhayden@lternet.edu                           |
|-----------------------------------------------------------------------|
|       VIRGINIA COAST RESERVE Long-Term Ecological Research Site       |
|       VCR LTER URL = http://atlantic.evsc.virginia.edu/               |
=========================================================================



