Culture Magazine

The Lake of Zurich as the Human, No-infrared Eye Cannot See

By Artborghi @artborghi

Enjoy full size view by clicking on each panorama.

artborghi-infrared-d800-lakezurich-panorama-3small

Slightly more than half of the energy from the Sun arrives on Earth in the form of infrared radiation. Water absorbs the infra-red radiation, that explains the black lake and forests under the clouds.

artborghi-infrared-d800-lakezurich-panorama-1small

The different pigments in plants reflect, transmit, and absorb different portions of the near-infrared radiation that we cannot see. Some plants can reflect more than others.

artborghi-infrared-d800-lakezurich-panorama-4small

The clouds absorb visible and invisible radiation from the sun and re-emit much of the energy as infrared back to the atmosphere. Enjoy the reflecting trees and clouds: can you find the snow reflecting infra-red in the background?


Filed under: infrared photography, photography of green Tagged: 850 nm filter for infrared, d800 infrared photography, Infrared cut-off filter, infrared zurich lake, Sunlight

Back to Featured Articles on Logo Paperblog

COMMENTS ( 1 )

By Elida Rodgers
posted on 10 November at 03:28
Report spam/abuse

Spot on with this write-up, I honestly believe this web site needs a lot more attention. I'll probably be returning to read more, thanks for the advice!