shimokita
白黒
Crepuscular Rays can be defined as "rays of sunlight, which stream through gaps in [e.g. stratocumulus] clouds or between other objects" and/or "...columns of sunlit air separated by darker cloud-shadowed regions."
Crepuscular is strictly defined as: "of, pertaining to, or resembling twilight; dim; indistinct".
Thus at first flush it would seem that crepuscular rays would only be present when the sun is below the horizon, either from daybreak to sunrise or from sunset to nightfall... and thus limited to an atmospheric phenomenon as shown below.
I am not an English language expert, nor "strict" in any academic sense... however a friend used "Crepuscular Rays" when describing a photo with sun filtering through a forest valley (i.e. late afternoon) where I might use the (non-technical term) 'sunbeams'...
1) Is there a technical term for what I describe as sunbeams in the example above?
2) Are Crepuscular Rays limited to being 'twilight' atmospheric phenomena?
Casey
Crepuscular is strictly defined as: "of, pertaining to, or resembling twilight; dim; indistinct".
Thus at first flush it would seem that crepuscular rays would only be present when the sun is below the horizon, either from daybreak to sunrise or from sunset to nightfall... and thus limited to an atmospheric phenomenon as shown below.
I am not an English language expert, nor "strict" in any academic sense... however a friend used "Crepuscular Rays" when describing a photo with sun filtering through a forest valley (i.e. late afternoon) where I might use the (non-technical term) 'sunbeams'...
1) Is there a technical term for what I describe as sunbeams in the example above?
2) Are Crepuscular Rays limited to being 'twilight' atmospheric phenomena?
Casey