Abstract
THE photographic halo phenomena described in NATURE, vol. xxiv. p. 260, seem analogous to some observed by me, and upon which, in the spring, I read a paper (since published in the Notices, vol. xli. No. 6) before the Royal Astronomical Society. In this I described that not only the sun's disk and the moon's full and partial phases, but also apertures (of similar shape to these) in the shutter of a dark room, when photographed, were, one and all, surrounded by a strong ring halo not visible to the eye. A correspondent essayed some time since to prove in your journal that this halo only surrounded the moon when at full, but on trial the question proved one of time of exposure; and it now seems pretty clear that whatever may be its form and nature, a very bright object when photographed (especially in relief against a dark ground) is found, if sufficient exposure be given, surrounded on the plate by a halo separated from the object by a dark space. Mr. Cowper Ranyard and others attribute these halos to reflection from the back of the plate, a point on which I have not experimented. The dark spot mentioned in connection with the aperture in the rock is probably a reversal of the brightest light owing to the length of exposure.
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CAPRON, J. Optical Phenomena. Nature 24, 284 (1881). https://doi.org/10.1038/024284d0
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1038/024284d0
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