I received a stack of envelopes; each contains a challenge. I must only open a new envelope once the previous task is completed. This time I had to watch the sun rise.
Here we need to add meaning. For a genuine experience, the sun has to rise above the horizon, and not simply peek over the roof of your neighbor's house. We had to get up in the dark, drive into the hills, take a brisk walk to a point with unobstructed views facing east. And then wait for the spectacle to unfold.
Unfortunately, I am one of those people who wake up long before the alarm rings because I worry of missing it. To fall back asleep, I started mentally calculating how far we would have to see to catch the sunrise over the horizon and not just over the trees of a nearby forest..
- R is the radius of earth at about 6,378,000 meter.
- h is the eye-level height of the observer.
- x is the distance to the horizon - where we expect the sun to appear.
(R+h)² = R² + x²
x = √(2Rh + h²)
We ignore the term h², because it is negligibly small compared to the radius of the earth. This simplifies the equation toFor a 2 meter tall person standing on the beach, the horizon is 5000 meter away, or 5 km. For a person sitting in a lighthouse 20 meter above ground, the horizon is 16 kilometer away.
We are not living on a beach. The Earth's surface is not a billiard ball, but resembles a shriveled orange. Our landscape is undulating and hilly. One must find a prominent point that allows an unobstructed view as far and beyond as required by the (calculated) distance to its (theoretical) horizon.
Based on my calculations during the night, I concluded that our chosen location would meet this condition. In the image below, taken exactly at the predicted time of the sunrise, the horizon is more than 70 kilometers away.



Glorious. I get my sunrises through the neighbouring trees and houses, with a cup of coffee in hand and a peaceful smile on my face (temperatures permitting).
ReplyDeleteThere is a place near Katmandu where you can stay and get up at 5 am to see the sunrise, looking at Mount Everest too. We did that along with our special friends Birendra and Rina. Its really worth the effort and your article reminded me of that time in Nepal.
ReplyDeleteBeautiful sunrise. I am never up that early, and we can't see the sun for about an hour when it appears from behind the hill. Your mathematical calculations are impressive, and also the reason why you went on that trip to see the sunrise, Maybe we all need such "requests" to get things done...
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