Setting Sun through a peep hole
This
evening as the Sun was setting, I was witness to a wonderful sight: The setting
of the Sun through a peephole. Yes, I was a voyeur, not of the everyday variety.
This
was a special show for one, me. It was available to many but not many would
have availed it and no one would have enjoyed it. The enjoyment I derived was
of a special kind.
Yesterday,
in the mostly cloud covered western sky I saw a bright spot, not more than
about one twenty fifths of the apparent diameter of the Sun as we see from the
earth (a little more than one arc minute).
The
spot was pure orange. There were the usual streaks of orange peeking out from
the edges of the clouds that many photographers have captured. But, this one
was different: a singular, tiny, bright, unsullied orange spot. It was as pure
as pure can be in the midst of splashes of color in the sky. I wanted to rush down
to my apartment, get my camera and photograph what I saw. But, sanity prevailed
and I merely enjoyed the beauty that lasted perhaps for two minutes. I wanted
no one else to partake in this spectacle.
Spectacle,
you say, you are asking. My answer: YES!
The
probability of the rays’ of the Sun filtering through a minute hole (made by
the edges of adjoining clouds) and the Sun filling it with its effulgent rays,
and this is the icing on the cake of probability, to hit the retina of an
observer who realizes what he is seeing is equal to the various parts of an
airplane upon crashing assembling itself to the before-the-crash configuration,
all on their own. The peephole was made in the atmosphere of the earth. What I
saw, then, is a near-earth spectacle (though the Sun is far from the earth), infinite
times more than that of a Solar or Lunar eclipse that people go Whoa!
over!
I
enjoyed this ephemeral beauty which is nigh impossible to be repeated. I am
writing this only to put it on record (without a photograph) for the brief time
this space will survive.
For
students of high school, the Sun offered this indelible opportunity, available
only to the initiated, on reckoning probability.
Probability
and beauty together. Alas, no teacher would be interested and no student could
be made to be interested. They say, just a bright spot in the sky.
Pity.
Raghuram
Ekambaram
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