Twilight

Owing to its distinctive quality, primarily the absence of shadows and the appearance of objects silhouetted against the lit sky, twilight has long been popular with photographers and painters, who often refer to it as the blue hour, after the French expression l'heure bleue.Twilight occurs according to the solar elevation angle θs, which is the position of the geometric center of the Sun relative to the horizon.Under good atmospheric conditions with the absence of other illumination, during nautical twilight, the human eye may distinguish general outlines of ground objects but cannot participate in detailed outdoor operations.A military unit may treat BMNT and EENT with heightened security, e.g. by "standing to", for which everyone assumes a defensive position.The nighttime/twilight boundary solar midnight's latitude varies depending on the month: At latitudes greater than about 48°34' North or South, on dates near the summer solstice (June 21 in the Northern Hemisphere or December 21 in the Southern Hemisphere), twilight can last from sunset to sunrise, since the Sun does not sink more than 18 degrees below the horizon, so complete darkness does not occur even at solar midnight.In Arctic and Antarctic latitudes in wintertime, the polar night only rarely produces complete darkness for 24 hours each day.At all other latitudes and dates, the polar night includes a daily period of twilight, when the Sun is not far below the horizon.At latitudes greater than 81°25' North or South, as the Sun's angular elevation difference is less than 18 degrees, twilight can last for the entire 24 hours.As one gets closer to the Arctic and Antarctic circles, the Sun's disk moves toward the observer's horizon at a lower angle.Within the polar circles, twenty-four-hour daylight is encountered in summer, and in regions very close to the poles, twilight can last for weeks on the winter side of the equinoxes.[18] In Christian practice, "vigil" observances often occur during twilight on the evening before major feast days or holidays.[citation needed] Hinduism prescribes the observance of certain practices during twilight, a period generally called sandhya.According to Hindu scriptures, an asura king, Hiranyakashipu, performed penance and obtained a boon from Brahma that he could not be killed during day or night, neither by human nor animal, neither inside his house nor outside.Vishnu appeared in a half-man half-lion form (neither human nor animal), and ended Hiranyakashipu's life at twilight (neither day nor night) while he was placed in the threshold of his house (neither inside nor outside).
Twilight is the time period between dawn and sunrise , and between sunset and dusk .
Morning twilight: astronomical, nautical, and civil stages at dawn. The apparent disk of the Sun is shown to scale. [ 1 ]
Evening twilight: civil, nautical, and astronomical stages at dusk. The solar disk is shown to scale.
Midtown Manhattan during civil twilight, demonstrating blue hour
Civil twilight in a small town in the Mojave Desert
Evening nautical twilight on Lake Ontario , Canada
Long exposure of nautical twilight in a small town in the Mojave Desert
At the beginning of nautical twilight, artificial lighting must be used to see terrestrial objects clearly.
Long exposure of astronomical twilight in a small town in the Mojave Desert
Astronomical twilight (dusk) with a crescent moon, as seen from Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia
World map showing limiting latitudes of each type of twilight during the solstices
Timelapse video of twilight and sunrise in Gjøvik in February 2021
The number of daylight hours depends on the latitude and time of year. Each pole has continuous daylight near its summer solstice .
Carpet plot of sunshine at latitude 70° north
Carpet plot of sunshine at latitude 50° north
Carpet plot of sunshine at the equator
Twilight at Paranal Observatory in Chile [ 14 ]
American Benedictine monks around an Easter fire preparing to light the Paschal candle prior to Easter Vigil Mass
Twilight (disambiguation)sunrisesunsetMorningEveningsunlight illuminationdiffuse sky radiationscatteredEarth's lower atmospherenighttimeblue hourFrenchmetaphoricallyvery old peoplecollateral adjectivecrepuscularsolar elevation angleCivil twilight (disambiguation)Midtown ManhattaninitialismsMojave Desertapparent magnitudelighting-up timeburglaryFederal Aviation RegulationsLake OntarioKuala Lumpur, Malaysiaskyglowlight pollutionmoonlightaurorasnebulaegalaxiesSeptember 1March 31 of the following yearNorthern HemisphereMarch 1September 30Southern HemisphereEquator lineTropic of Cancer (about 23°26' North)Tropic of Capricorn (about 23°26' South)GjøvikJune 21December 21United Kingdomnorthern Europecentral EuropeJune 21stDecember 21stAlaskaIcelandFinlandSwedenNorwayFaroe IslandsShetlandSouthern OceanAntarctic Peninsulawhite nightRussiaCanadaEstoniaLatviaScotlandLithuaniaDenmarkSouth AmericaUshuaiaArgentinaPuerto WilliamsIsle of ManAleutian IslandsBelarusIrelandNetherlandsPolandGermanyBelgiumCzech RepublicBellingham, WashingtonOrcas Island, WashingtonVancouver, British ColumbiaParis, FranceLuxembourgGuernseyUkraineSlovakiaHungarySouth Georgia and the South Sandwich IslandsBouvet IslandHeard IslandFalkland IslandsEl CalafateRío GallegosPuerto Natalesastronomersdeep skyArcticAntarcticpolar nightwinter solsticeAmundsen–Scott South Pole StationAlert, Nunavutsummer solsticeCarpet plotParanal ObservatorylatitudeGreenwich, Englandequatorlow latitudesperpendicularpolar circlestwenty-four-hour daylightequinoxesaxial tiltTampereTrondheimTórshavnReykjavíkWhitehorseYellowknifeAnchorageFairbanksArkhangelskYakutskBaltasoundVilla Las EstrellasSaint PetersburgMoscowVitebskVilniusTallinnWejherowoFlensburgHelsinkiStockholmCopenhagenNewcastle upon TyneEdinburghGlasgowBelfastLetterkennyPetropavlNanortalikGrande PrairieJuneauHulun BuirErdenetNur-SultanSamaraAlytusWarsawKošiceDublinZwettlPragueStanleyBerlinHamburgLuxembourg CityBrusselsAmsterdamLondonCardiffVancouverCalgaryEdmontonUnalaskaBellinghamRio GallegosPunta ArenasKhabarovskDniproVictoriaSaguenayThunder BayViennaBratislavaMunichSeattlevolcanic eruptionsBenedictine monksEaster firePaschal candleChristianEaster VigilHoly SaturdayEaster DayHinduismSanskritSandhyavandanamasurasavatarsVishnuNarasimhaHindu scripturesHiranyakashipuBrahmauniversally obligatory prayersMaghrib prayerSabbathBelt of VenusEarth's shadowGreen flashBibcodeWayback Machine14 CFRCelestial equatorEncyclopædia BritannicaDaytimeAfternoonMidnightWitching hourBrahmamuhurtaGolden hourTerminatorDaylightMidnight sunZodiacal light