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Heiligenschein

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Heiligenschein around the shadow of a balloon on a field of standing crops

Heiligenschein (German for "aureole" or "halo", literally "Saint's shine") is an optical phenomenon which creates a bright spot around the shadow of the viewer's head. It is created when the surface on which the shadow falls has special optical characteristics. Dewy grass is known to exhibit these characteristics, and create a Heiligenschein. Nearly spherical dew droplets act as lenses to focus the light on the surface beneath them. Some of this light 'backscatters' in the direction of the sunlight as it passes back through the dew droplet. This makes the antisolar point appear the brightest.

Heiligenschein around head of Buzz Aldrin's shadow due to extreme retroreflective properties of lunar regolith. This is a close up of the reflection in Aldrins visor, cropped from the famous image, catalog number AS11-40-5903. The white figure to the right is the photographer, Neil Armstrong.

The opposition effect enhances this halo effect by creating a bright spot of light around the viewer's head when the viewer is looking in the opposite direction of the sun. When viewing the Heiligenschein, there are no coloured rings around the shadow of the observer, as in the case of a glory.

In German, Heiligenschein is only used in religious context, like nimbus or gloriole.

See also