Red-orange skies and wildfires

  • I
  • Thread starter fog37
  • Start date
In summary, the red-orange color of the sky during the recent wildfires on the west coast is caused by sunlight interacting with particles in the atmosphere. Normally, the smaller blue wavelengths are scattered more than the red wavelengths, giving the sky a blue appearance. However, when the particles are larger than the wavelengths of visible light, all wavelengths are equally scattered, resulting in a white color, as seen in clouds. The orange-red color during the wildfires is due to a combination of Rayleigh scattering and wavelength-independent multiple scattering. The longer wavelength colors like red and orange are able to pass through the smoke particles, while the shorter wavelengths are blocked. This is similar to the effect seen during sunrise and sunset, when the sun's rays have to pass through more
  • #1
fog37
1,568
108
TL;DR Summary
Reason why skies are red-orange due to the recent wildfires
Hello and happy Sunday.

I am trying to fully understand what causes the red-orange sky color during the recent and tragic wildfires on the west coast.

In general, sunlight encounters airborne particles in the normal sky (assuming no clouds or smoke). The air particles (I guess they are truly molecules, not really particles) are smaller in size than any of the wavelengths of sunlight in the visible spectrum. Given that particle size < wavelength, the smaller blue wavelengths are scattered more than the red wavelengths (Rayleigh scattering, inverse 4th power wavelength dependence). The extra scattering suffered by short wavelengths essentially removes more blue radiation from the starting sunlight beam that red radiation. This means that particles in normal sky (no fog or smoke) make the sky appear blue (short radiation) and the sunlight beam contain less blue radiation. Removing from the forward direction is scattering. Question: in which direction should point a spectrometer to verify that sunlight has less of blue wavelength component? Should we point it straight toward the sun? That would probably damage the device though...

When sunlight instead interacts with particles having size > wavelengths of visible light, scattering becomes wavelength-independent and all wavelengths are equally scattered.This is what happens with clouds which are white. So clouds are an example of wavelength-independent multiple scattering. Question: what if we had Rayleigh (wavelength dependent) multiple scattering? Would the overall effect be a more pronounced Rayleigh scattering?

Orange-red skies: in the case of the orange skies caused by the recent wildfires, the sky looks orange-red because (I believe):
a) sunlight is first "reddened" by Rayleigh scattering caused light being scattered by smoke particles with size< lambda. These smoke particles remove a larger portion of the blue energy from the beam. The beam has mostly red light.
b) The now reddened sunlight beam then collides with an area of smoke particles with sizes both smaller and larger than the visible wavelengths of light. Overall, wavelength-independent multiple scattering takes place and the sky becomes red-orange.

Is my understanding correct? Thank you as usual.
 
Physics news on Phys.org
  • #2
https://www.nasa.gov/image-feature/...northwest-caused-by-smoke-from-siberian-fires

I searched your question on google and this is what I found.

"The smoke particles from the fires allow sunlight's longer wavelength colors like red and orange to get through while blocking the shorter wavelengths of yellow, blue and green. Those longer wavelengths give the sky a red or orange tinted appearance. Similarly, during sunrise and sunset times when the sun is near the horizon, sunlight has to travel through more of Earth's atmosphere to get to you. The additional atmosphere filters out the shorter wavelengths and allows the longer wavelengths to get through, providing reds and oranges during those times. "
P.S. Particulate matter in wood smoke has a size range near the wavelength of visible light (0.4 – 0.7 micrometers). So it makes sense that the visible light having a longer wavelength can circumvent the smoke particles and therefore be detected by your eyes.

1600010641552.png


1600010564349.png
 
  • Like
Likes fog37 and Hamiltonian

1. What causes the red-orange skies during wildfires?

During wildfires, the smoke particles in the air scatter sunlight in a way that filters out blue light and allows red and orange light to pass through. This creates the red-orange hue in the sky.

2. Are the red-orange skies during wildfires harmful?

The red-orange skies themselves are not harmful, but they are a visual indicator of potentially harmful air quality due to the presence of smoke and other pollutants from the wildfires.

3. Can the red-orange skies during wildfires be seen from far away?

Yes, the red-orange skies can be seen from far away depending on the size and intensity of the wildfires. The smoke can travel long distances and affect the sky in surrounding areas.

4. How do wildfires affect air quality?

Wildfires can significantly decrease air quality by releasing harmful pollutants such as carbon monoxide, nitrogen oxides, and particulate matter into the air. These pollutants can cause respiratory problems and other health issues for humans and animals.

5. Are there any long-term effects of wildfires on the environment?

Yes, wildfires can have long-term effects on the environment. They can destroy habitats and disrupt ecosystems, leading to a loss of biodiversity. They can also contribute to climate change by releasing large amounts of carbon dioxide into the atmosphere.

Similar threads

Replies
57
Views
3K
Replies
4
Views
7K
Replies
4
Views
2K
Replies
29
Views
2K
Replies
9
Views
3K
Replies
12
Views
1K
Replies
23
Views
4K
Replies
3
Views
1K
Replies
1
Views
4K
Replies
2
Views
2K
Back
Top