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The Illuminati Project Pushes For Dark Skies In 2009

An anonymous reader writes "2009 is the 400th anniversary of Galileo's observations of Venus, Saturn and Jupiter published in Sidereus Nuncius ('Starry Messenger'). To improve scientific literacy, the NOAO and NASA are promoting dark-sky initiatives in 2009 to draw attention to the problem of light pollution which obscures nearly all night sky colors and objects except for the moon and a few bright stars and planets. Project Illuminati is a Flickr project by James Cann to showcase the beauty of light pollution to raise awareness and educate fellow Earthmates to lower energy consumption and become more curious about our place in the universe."

315 comments

  1. I am confused... by GweeDo · · Score: 5, Insightful

    They are trying to promote dark skies (which of course show some amazing celestial bodies) by showing how pretty of a red sky light pollution makes???

    1. Re:I am confused... by jadin · · Score: 5, Interesting

      There are a lot of things people can do to stop light pollution without increasing risks.

      The easiest example I remember is streetlights that use cones to direct the light at the ground instead of letting it escape every direction including up into the sky. The amount of light we have on the ground remains the same and light pollution is noticeably reduced by this simple example.

      Thanks for making me waste a mod point by replying to your knee-jerk response.

      - I'm also confused by their campaign choice, let's stop light pollution cause it's so.. beautiful!

    2. Re:I am confused... by Klootzak · · Score: 1

      Hrm, tetchy, I think... you're low on Electrolytes, have some more! :)

      --
      A Man's ethical behavior should be based effectually on sympathy, education, and social ties -- Albert Einstein
    3. Re:I am confused... by Bill,+Shooter+of+Bul · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Yeah, that was a knee jerk response, but a good one. Often You hear advocacy group A advocate their position as if it was the only one around. For the price of a starbucks latte we could put a Man on mars!. Or eliminate Cancer. Or eliminate AIDS. Or Create 1 million high paying jobs.

      The point being that there are trade offs... opportunity costs. That isn't an argument for the status quo, but somethings need to be considered in conjunction with other factors. As the parent suggested perhaps there is a way we could cheaply reduce the light pollution while maintaining the current level of crime fighting that it gives us.

      --
      Well.. maybe. Or Maybe not. But Definitely not sort of.
    4. Re:I am confused... by golfbum · · Score: 2, Insightful

      illumination effectiveness falls off with the square of the distance from the source. any illumination that comes from a street lamp that comes from an angle much more than 45 degrees from directly down is pretty useless. all it does is act as a beacon to blind folks unfortunate enough to view it. lights are often visible from a half mile away which is completely absurd. of course in addition to light pollution and reducing night vision ability it also pisses away power. gb

    5. Re:I am confused... by hairyfeet · · Score: 4, Interesting

      What about switching to blue lights? I saw some shots of streets where they had switched to blue street lights(Japan, I think) and not only did it seem to help with light pollution but according to the article it actually saw a reduction in crime where the blue lights were in place. They weren't sure why exactly, there was some speculation that it caused criminals to pause as it was harder to judge where they could and couldn't be seen, or perhaps the color simply made it harder for them to judge their target, hell who knows. But if it works we could have a win/win here. Because from the pics I saw there was plenty of light from the blue street lights without the spreading that you see from the white. And as a plus it looks really pretty at night.

      --
      ACs don't waste your time replying, your posts are never seen by me.
    6. Re:I am confused... by ppanon · · Score: 2, Informative

      LED Street lights should help a lot with this. LED illumination is a lot more directional and therefore there should have a lot less wasted photons/energy. As a bonus it saves money for the same level of illumination. Pilot projects are already under way.

      --
      Laissez lire, et laissez danser; ces deux amusements ne feront jamais de mal au monde. - Voltaire
    7. Re:I am confused... by magarity · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Nothing provides a more dramatic reduction in crime than a good streetlight
       
      Nothing provides help for criminals like a poorly designed streetlight that provides strong cover shadows while blinding would-be crime watchers. Most super bright nighttime lighting does exactly this. People like you who think any light is a good light are part of the problem, both for crime and seeing the stars.

    8. Re:I am confused... by LaskoVortex · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Nothing provides a more dramatic reduction in crime than a good streetlight.

      Wealth.

      --
      Just callin' it like I see it.
    9. Re:I am confused... by Blakey+Rat · · Score: 0

      Or people who want to see dark skies could just drive for a couple hours and leave the rest of us alone.

    10. Re:I am confused... by amirulbahr · · Score: 2, Insightful

      I would have though light reflected up from the ground would be non-negligible.

    11. Re:I am confused... by FatdogHaiku · · Score: 2, Informative

      I can tell you that having lived in the sticks for years (avg roughly 1 home per sq. mile) that we crank up the high powered yard lights. In the good old days it was the frosty white of mercury vapor, but they blocked the sale of those so now you see the golden glow of sodium lights... on at dusk on off at dawn. Sadly, it's necessary to keep the tweaks from taking everything that is not nailed down.

      --
      You have the right to remain sentient. If you give up the right to remain sentient, you will be elected to public office
    12. Re:I am confused... by MadnessASAP · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Perhaps simply because blue is a calming color?

      --
      I may agree with what you say, but I will defend to the death your right to face the consequences of saying it.
    13. Re:I am confused... by Bill,+Shooter+of+Bul · · Score: 2, Insightful

      No, you totally missed the point. completely. Just because improving things isn't easy and there are tradeoffs, doesn't mean you don't try. You can't only do the easy, obvious things in life. Complexity is not impossibility.

      --
      Well.. maybe. Or Maybe not. But Definitely not sort of.
    14. Re:I am confused... by Dan541 · · Score: 1

      or perhaps the color simply made it harder for them to judge their target,

      Should make night time car trips allot more interesting.

      --
      An SQL query goes to a bar, walks up to a table and asks, "Mind if I join you?"
    15. Re:I am confused... by Dan541 · · Score: 2, Interesting

      Or install Google earth.

      --
      An SQL query goes to a bar, walks up to a table and asks, "Mind if I join you?"
    16. Re:I am confused... by Dan541 · · Score: 4, Funny

      Agreed,
      money can buy allot of shotgun shells.

      --
      An SQL query goes to a bar, walks up to a table and asks, "Mind if I join you?"
    17. Re:I am confused... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Informative

      Blue is great until you get fog. The wavelength of blue light is about the same size as water, so is highly dispersed in foggy conditions. There's a reason why sodium-discharge lamps are so popular in coastal California.

    18. Re:I am confused... by Roy+Hobbs · · Score: 1

      good idea red lights are nice too, less power, easier on the eye at night

    19. Re:I am confused... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yeah, you live out West, don't you. East of the Mississippi there IS no place like that with no cities within 2 hours. Shoot, not even one hour..

    20. Re:I am confused... by o2sd · · Score: 1

      I would have though light reflected up from the ground would be non-negligible.

      I believe it is smaller than ambient light for a couple of reasons.

      (1) Unpainted concrete is not that reflective.
      (2) Tar roads are black, and tend not to reflect light much.

      The real problem is three fold; ambient light, water vapour and particulate. We can't do much about the water vapour (as the majority of the world's population live near the coast), particulate can be reduced significantly as the California experience shows, and that just leaves ambient light.

      I spent some time in San Bernadino, and when the Santa Anna was blowing it became very dry and smog free, and you could see a LOT of stars from the backyard despite the enormous amount of ambient light from streetlights etc. So it is all well and good to produce less light (and save the whales ... er I mean ... planet at the same time), but mist, dust and pollutants play a much bigger part.

      --
      - Nothing to see hear.
    21. Re:I am confused... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Informative

      I live in England, there are very few places, if any, where light pollution does not affect the night sky.

      The most remote places I have been to are Pembrook (South Wales) and the lake district. I've seen light pollution, even though it is slight, in both of these places.

      In the last 10 or so years the level of light pollution where I live (the edge of the peak district) has noticable increased. I used to be able to make out the milky way very easily at night, but can't see it at all any more. I don't think this is because my eyesight is degrading.

      Not everyone has a 'nowhere' to drive to.

    22. Re:I am confused... by KlaymenDK · · Score: 3, Interesting

      drive for a couple hours

      You're lucky if you live somewhere where darkness is only a car drive away.
      The islands that constitute my home country are pretty thoroughly populated, so there's no direction in which a couple hours' drive would get you to a dark spot; I'd have to drive a good distance into the neighbouring country. Not something I'd do for casual stargazing to awe and inspire the kids!

    23. Re:I am confused... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Man, you are pathetic.
      "hi powered lights"? Sadly it's necessary.."?
      Those bright lights simply allow the intruder to ping you.
      Ever heard of a sawed-off shotgun?
      I live in the sticks too. But then it's not America. And in twenty five years, I have never had to employ... ummm, aforementioned techniques. And neither have any of my rural neighbours.
      But then we do not live in "the land of the free"...
      Sleep well, Americano. No wonder you folks are so pill-crazy.

    24. Re:I am confused... by triffid_98 · · Score: 2
      I think the issues are
      1. We've already built these nice monster sized telescopes, they are not all that portable
      2. Even in virtually uninhabited places like Death Valley, you're still getting quite a bit of light pollution from Las Vegas, which is over 85 miles away. There are very few truly dark places left in the continental US.

      Or people who want to see dark skies could just drive for a couple hours and leave the rest of us alone.

    25. Re:I am confused... by conureman · · Score: 2, Interesting

      IIRC an astronomer at Lick Observatory told me once that the High Pressure Sodium lamps caused worse problems than the Mercury Vapor lamps, but the cities were switching over (back in the '60s) to get more lumens per watt of electricity. Those fucking tweakers are amazing aren't they? Here I think they carry nail-pullers.

      --
      The cost of that cleanup, of course, will be borne by taxpayers, not industry.
    26. Re:I am confused... by Chrisq · · Score: 3, Interesting

      What is really sad is that I live in a city where you can only see one or two stars. We went out to a park on the edge of the city with some friends and their kids. It got dark, which happens early at this time of year in the UK. You could see about fifty stars in the sky on the side opposite the city and their kids were saying "wow, look at all the stars".

      If they travelled about 30 miles they would have been able to see a thousand or so and just made out the milky way. If they travelled 100 miles they would have seen real dark skies - but they had obviously done neither.

    27. Re:I am confused... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yeah, a four hour round trip plus a couple of hours observing just so an idiot like you can rage against people with an interest in astronomy.

      Your football team called, they need you in the showers again.

    28. Re:I am confused... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If you go to La Serena (Chile), they replaced long time ago all street lights with ones that their emission can be filtered out in the nearby observatories (like La Silla, http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/La_Silla)

    29. Re:I am confused... by Eternauta3k · · Score: 1

      Calming? A friend of mine has one of those lights outside his house, it makes me feel like I'm in an alien ship about to be probed. Probably drives bored youths to take their business elsewhere.

      --
      Yeah. Would you choose a neurosurgeon who pokes around people's brains in his spare time? I wouldn't.
    30. Re:I am confused... by MyDogHasFleas · · Score: 1

      Speaking of Chile, the skies from Santiago are surprisingly clear for such a large city. Most of the lights here appear more of an orangish color. Not sure what type they are but, I can see more stars here than I can see from my hometown in the US. And that is from a city which has a poplulation of about 200,000 vice the 5,000,000 or so here in Santiago.

    31. Re:I am confused... by AngryNick · · Score: 1

      This one makes the point well...a comparison of the sky as seen from Leamington, UT, (pop. 217) vs. Orem, UT, (pop. ~400,000). I agree that most of the others just seem to confuse the point trying to be made and do little to promote the initative.

    32. Re:I am confused... by FatdogHaiku · · Score: 1

      Here they got to the point of stealing copper, that's got a few of them fried... tip, if the wires are on a power pole, you might want to go steal something else.

      --
      You have the right to remain sentient. If you give up the right to remain sentient, you will be elected to public office
    33. Re:I am confused... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      So with all these street lights you must have almost no crime right? No? You mean people still mug rape and murder with the light on? Why not put cameras everywhere that will stop the crime won't it? Like in the UK where cameras have stopped crime in its tracks!

      The street lights are often off completely in my area in a city of 2 million (Vienna). We don't see a increase in the amount of rapes/muggings or carjackings.

    34. Re:I am confused... by drinkypoo · · Score: 1

      You can get 40% or better efficiency improvements by just adding aluminum or stainless steel (either one lasts) reflectors to your streetlamps to actually put the light on the ground. I live in Lake County very close to The Geysers, where Calpine Geothermal is busy producing horribly toxic pollutants (we have an Arsenic-related superfund site out of Middletown which is related to the geothermal power production.) For some reason, Calpine has HUGE lights which shine up, down, everywhere. They have enough light to basically light up their entire operation and then some, and most of it shines upward. What this means is that anywhere on Cobb mountain or in Kelseyville, Lakeport, etc the sky is permanently partially lightened. You have to go to the north end of the county some 20 miles away or better before you can actually look up and see the Milky Way - which is pathetic given how few people live around here. But just consider how many megawatts of power are collectively lost by porch lights and so on which radiate their light in all directions, just so that we can have some lights that look like lanterns or chandeliers...

      --
      "You're right," Fisheye says. "I should have set it on 'whip' or 'chop.'"
    35. Re:I am confused... by FatdogHaiku · · Score: 1

      Actually, everyone out here has guns. And in this state you can wear them casually in most situations as long as they are visible. Concealed permits are not difficult to obtain, if you don't want to spoil your fashion look with a holster. Sawed Off shotguns are a dumb weapon, the effective range is far too small and the cycle rate too slow... why let someone get that close to you and then screw up a bunch of your own drywall and paint?

      --
      You have the right to remain sentient. If you give up the right to remain sentient, you will be elected to public office
    36. Re:I am confused... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Styx

    37. Re:I am confused... by Thelasko · · Score: 1

      The islands that constitute my home country are pretty thoroughly populated, so there's no direction in which a couple hours' drive would get you to a dark spot

      What about a couple hours' boat ride?

      --
      One of our competitors trademarked the term "hypothesis". From now on, we will call them "boneheaded ideas".
    38. Re:I am confused... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Funny

      Ah, the UK, where 30 miles is a long way away and 300 years is a little while ago.

    39. Re:I am confused... by Aris+Katsaris · · Score: 1

      And simply use earplugs if your next-door neighbors have parties with deafening music 24/7?

      And if people want to breathe they shouldn't care about keeping the air breathable, they should simply buy oxygen tanks for themselves and their children.

      And if people want to drink clean water, they shouldn't make sure the city provides adequate piping infrastructure, they should just made do with water bottles.

      And what's the problem with radioactive fallout? People should just buy and wear the appropriate suits.

      You're not conversing, Blakey Rat. In fact you're not even saying anything. Things like streetlights are a public affair, and as such our "whims" on this matter are as valid as yours.

      Except, you know, coherent.

    40. Re:I am confused... by jacoby · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Nothing provides help for criminals like a poorly designed streetlight that provides strong cover shadows while blinding would-be crime watchers. Most super bright nighttime lighting does exactly this. People like you who think any light is a good light are part of the problem, both for crime and seeing the stars.

      C'mon. If nobody's watching, then all a streetlight does is let the criminal see what he's doing.

    41. Re:I am confused... by c0p0n · · Score: 1
      --

      Your head a splode
    42. Re:I am confused... by Tetsujin · · Score: 1

      - I'm also confused by their campaign choice, let's stop light pollution cause it's so.. beautiful!

      It's kind of a capital-A Art thing...

      Basically, you want to put a bunch of focus on this problem, and what sort of effects it has. But to draw people in, the parts of the problem you examine have to be compelling somehow. Meanwhile, as side-effects of this problem there's all kinds of unique effects which can get the "found art" treatment...

      People see the pretty pictures, and hopefully take the time to read about what's wrong with 'em. I guess that's the idea.

      --
      Bow-ties are cool.
    43. Re:I am confused... by elrous0 · · Score: 1

      That's fine if you just want to light up the ground directly below the light. But most streetlights also help provide light to the road ahead and behind, the area behind it, the area up the hill beside it, etc., etc. Streetlights aren't spotlights, they're meant to illuminate an entire area. And I agree with the GP, city lights provide safety, which is way more important than some junior astronomer's right to see the Milky Way clearly.

      --
      SJW: Someone who has run out of real oppression, and has to fake it.
    44. Re:I am confused... by houghi · · Score: 1

      I live in Belgium where the highway is lighted at night, so don't come here.
      http://www.learner.org/jnorth/images/graphics/s/songbird_migration_lights01.jpg might help you to tell you where to go.

      --
      Don't fight for your country, if your country does not fight for you.
    45. Re:I am confused... by Blakey+Rat · · Score: 1

      My point was that "not being able to see a lot of stars" is extremely petty. Compared to "neighbors with constantly loud music" or "not being able to breathe" or "there's no clean water", it is... you haven't changed my mind one bit.

      Unless you're seriously equating "no clean water" with "not able to see dim stars" in which case I think you're literally crazy.

      Things like streetlights are a public affair, and as such our "whims" on this matter are as valid as yours.

      I agree, but the benefits of streetlights far, outweigh the downside of "waaah I can't see as many stars as people in 1850 could!"

      If astronomy is important to you, move somewhere where you can practice astronomy!

      Let's say I like snowmobiling... does that mean I should start up some project to convince every city to set aside a couple days a year to buy artificial snow machines and cover all the streets? Of course not, that demand is crazy. I could easily just drive (or fly, or otherwise travel) to a place where there's snow and enjoy my hobby without inconveniencing everybody else.

    46. Re:I am confused... by Tetsujin · · Score: 1

      Nothing provides help for criminals like a poorly designed streetlight that provides strong cover shadows while blinding would-be crime watchers. Most super bright nighttime lighting does exactly this. People like you who think any light is a good light are part of the problem, both for crime and seeing the stars.

      C'mon. If nobody's watching, then all a streetlight does is let the criminal see what he's doing.

      Do you think turning Jupiter into a small star could solve the problem?

      --
      Bow-ties are cool.
    47. Re:I am confused... by Aris+Katsaris · · Score: 3, Insightful

      My point was that "not being able to see a lot of stars" is extremely petty

      Petty, compared to what? Compared to air-pollution and sound-pollution? Certainly -- that's why we have laws for those things already, and not yet for light-pollution.

      But that it's of smaller significance that *those* things, doesn't make it a meaningless one to try to solve.

      I agree, but the benefits of streetlights far, outweigh the downside of "waaah I can't see as many stars as people in 1850 could!"

      The only one saying "waah" is you. As for the benefits of streetlights, I see worth in streetlights, but I also see room for improvement in them.

      If astronomy is important to you, move somewhere where you can practice astronomy!

      If the quality of life in MY CITY is important to me, I'll bloody well discuss about how to improve life in my CITY. And looking at the stars may not be as important as clean air and clean water, but its worth isn't zero either.

    48. Re:I am confused... by jstott · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Or people who want to see dark skies could just drive for a couple hours and leave the rest of us alone.

      You can see city glow for literally over 100 miles. Where, pray tell, on the east coast (where I live) can I drive "a couple hours" and be 150 miles from the nearest town, city, or lighted interstate?

      That's the whole point — there is virtually no where in the continental United States left that has truly dark skies anymore. And the sad part is, we could get them back at low cost, but its not expedient.

      -JS

      --
      Vanity of vanities, all is vanity...
    49. Re:I am confused... by An+dochasac · · Score: 1

      "What about a couple hours' boat ride?" Not enough. I once sailed across Lake Michigan about 100 miles north of Chicago (1999 ish) and took the night watch both there and back (a 8 to 10 hour cruise each way.) The Chicago lights were obvious to the south both during the clear night on the way across and the rainy night on the way back and of course the Milwaukee lights were visible only 80 miles away. It never really got very dark. You can stand on the east or west shore of Lake Michigan and make out cities on other shore, far over the horizon. Fortunately, until someone decides to install holographic laser advertising on LEO satellites, a few hundred miles of ocean IS sufficient to get you in darkness. I'm still amazed that even with trillions lost in this economy, the prospective of saving a few billion through a no brainer effort (eliminate above horizing outdoor lighting) seems to scare people. Maybe it has something to do with the appearance of the Milky way which caused hundreds of "the sky is on fire" 911 calls during power outages which came from the the L.A. earthquake.

    50. Re:I am confused... by tlinget · · Score: 1

      I thought pink was the calming color. It is used in some prisons.

    51. Re:I am confused... by TakeyMcTaker · · Score: 2, Interesting

      Targeted blue lights may correlate with lowered suicide rates:

      http://www.physorg.com/news148153021.html

      However, streetlights in general have not been proven to prevent any crime:

      http://www.delscope.demon.co.uk/information/lightpollution.htm#security

      http://amper.ped.muni.cz/light/crime/lp040_1h.html

    52. Re:I am confused... by Thiez · · Score: 1

      I live in the Netherlands, you insensitive clod!

    53. Re:I am confused... by Cytotoxic · · Score: 1

      There are places where street lights are strictly controlled for darker skies and it does not negatively impact the utility of the lights. The main island of Hawaii takes it's astronomy seriously and you only see shrouded low pressure lights anywhere on the island. Very effective at reducing light pollution and still quite normal street lighting conditions while walking or driving. It really is a much better living environment and there really isn't any reason not to follow their example.

    54. Re:I am confused... by Mr.+Firewall · · Score: 1

      There are very few truly dark places left in the continental US.

      So, you've never been to Montana, or Wyoming, or Idaho, or eastern Oregon, or northern New Hampshire, have you?

      --
      In times of universal deceit, telling the truth gets you modded -1 Troll
    55. Re:I am confused... by Mr.+Firewall · · Score: 1

      Where, pray tell, on the east coast (where I live) can I drive "a couple hours" and be 150 miles from the nearest town, city, or lighted interstate?

      That's the whole point -- there is virtually no where in the continental United States left that has truly dark skies anymore.

      Damn Easterners. The goddamn East Coast is NOT representative of the entire continent. Try pulling your head out of your East Coast ass once in a while and go see the rest of America.

      Damn near one-third of the CONUS still has truly dark skies.

      --
      In times of universal deceit, telling the truth gets you modded -1 Troll
    56. Re:I am confused... by magarity · · Score: 1

      Only for the part of the year when Jupiter is in opposition to the Sun. How about Saturn too then, while you're at it. Then the odds of a mini sun being up at night would double.

    57. Re:I am confused... by tehcyder · · Score: 1

      Ah, the UK, where 30 miles is a long way away and 300 years is a little while ago.

      Ah, the US, where 300 miles is a short commute and 30 years ago is, like, ancient history.

      --
      To have a right to do a thing is not at all the same as to be right in doing it
  2. It's really amazing how much of a difference by Rei · · Score: 5, Informative

    getting out into the middle of nowhere makes. On a clear night out in Yellowstone, for example, there are so many stars in the sky it can be hard to find constellations you're used to seeing in the city. Really beautiful.

    People need to get past the idea that you have to try to illuminate every shadow. All you're doing is ruining people's night vision, and thus making the remaining shadows "darker".

    --
    "99 dead duelists of Dios on the wall. 99 dead duelists of Dios! Take one's ring, pass it around..."
    1. Re:It's really amazing how much of a difference by SirLurksAlot · · Score: 2, Interesting

      I know exactly what you mean. In my younger days my family lived in rural Missouri where they didn't have any street lights (back country roads are like that.....or used to be at any rate). I could go outside on any given night and see the Milky Way. I've since moved central Ohio and now I realize what a problem street lamps are for stargazing. It is a real shame, and I can't help but think about the number of people who have grown up in the city and never experienced a true night sky.

      People need to get past the idea that you have to try to illuminate every shadow. All you're doing is ruining people's night vision, and thus making the remaining shadows "darker".

      I'm just pitching in the dark here (insert rimshot :-P), but I think the major argument for all the street lights in most places is presumably safety. I know that in the city that I live in there are streets I actively avoid at night (as well as during the day come to think of it) because of the part of town they're in and their lack of street lamps. I would love to see more cities using anti-light pollutions lamps, as this would really be the best of both worlds.

      --
      God, schmod. I want my monkey man!
    2. Re:It's really amazing how much of a difference by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I am sure the night vision or lack thereof of slashdotters isn't affected at all by street lights.

    3. Re:It's really amazing how much of a difference by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      On a clear night out in Yellowstone

      Enjoy it while it's there...

    4. Re:It's really amazing how much of a difference by Chabo · · Score: 1

      When I worked at a summer camp a few years ago, all of the staff carried flashlights, but rarely used them, because they were able to walk the trails at night with nothing but ambient light from the sky, even on the darker nights where there was cloud cover and a new moon. About the only time they would get used is when walking with the campers, as a courtesy.

      I use Surefire flashlights now, but at the time I carried a Mini-Maglite, with the regular incandescent bulb. I put a pair of AAs in there at the beginning of the summer, and 10 weeks later I went home with the same pair of batteries running that light, and they were just starting to die.

      --
      Convert FLACs to a portable format with FlacSquisher
    5. Re:It's really amazing how much of a difference by MichaelSmith · · Score: 1

      When I worked at a summer camp a few years ago, all of the staff carried flashlights, but rarely used them, because they were able to walk the trails at night with nothing but ambient light from the sky

      Near a city, thats easy to do ;)

      In the Mallee I have been out on nights where Venus was almost too bright to look at, and distant towns could be seen by their halos.

    6. Re:It's really amazing how much of a difference by lysergic.acid · · Score: 2, Interesting

      yea, i still remember the first time i went stargazing somewhere with practically no light pollution. i was staying at a rural Buddhist temple/monastery in Taiwan for a Buddhist summer camp. Taiwan has a somewhat tropical climate, and i remember it being a warm summer night with a very soothing breeze. the group of us just laid on the roof of the monastery for hours staring up at the star-filled sky. it was absolutely breathtaking.

      being able to see the night sky like that really is one of those simple pleasures that i wish more people could experience. i mean, it doesn't cost any money really. all you have to do is get away from the light pollution found in most major cities. but i guess that's becoming harder and harder to do these days.

      i remember when i was growing up and my parents and i were still living with my grandma in Taiwan, my dad had a skylight installed in our room directly above the bed so that we could look at the stars at night. back then our home town was still transitioning from a farming community to a medium-sized urban population center. so there was some light pollution, but you could still see the stars at night. and whenever my cousins spent the weekend with us, we'd run down to the local 7-11 and pick up a ton of snacks (Taiwan has a great selection of junk food =P) and just hang out under the "moonroof"--it was funner than watching TV (well, in Taiwan everything on cable after 10 PM is basically porn) or playing video games.

      sadly, the last time i went back to Taiwan (~4 years ago) the town had become completely (over)industrialized. i mean, there were already a few factories going up in the area when we were still living there in the early 90's, but by the time i went back the whole place had become a full-blown industrial/commercial district. the air was smoggy; the roads were dirty & littered; the creeks & irrigation channels that once ran by the fields were all either dried up or disgustingly polluted; and you could no longer see the stars at night.

      but i guess that's the cost of economic growth...

    7. Re:It's really amazing how much of a difference by opposabledumbs · · Score: 1

      Totally true. In the three years that I spent in Taiwan recently, I hardly ever could see even 1 star in the sky because of the light pollution- to say nothing of the other types of pollution there. And being a rather small island, you can't get away from it.

      We're not just talking streetlights, either: the streets are festooned with more neon than I thought possible, and all the billboards use massive spotlights to light themselves with. Plus local developers tend to use full-on air raid searchlights to advertize the place of their next gated community.

      Streetlights are an enemy, but advertizing is much more so.

       

    8. Re:It's really amazing how much of a difference by smoker2 · · Score: 1

      Heron Island was good, 70km off NE Queensland. As was Uluru.

    9. Re:It's really amazing how much of a difference by Dan541 · · Score: 1

      I agree, something that really pisses me off is people who use torches outside at night.

      A few weeks ago me and some mates took a shortcut through the cemetery, the place is huge so it makes allot more sense to walk through than to walk a few miles around the outside. Some of my mates kept using small key ring torches of course they ignore my advice that it is better to simply not use them, like all humans they ignore logic and a few of them managed to walk into low hung tree branches, trip on solid objects and a variety of other things. I walked about 100meters ahead of them and could see as clear as day the whole way through without injuring myself.

      --
      An SQL query goes to a bar, walks up to a table and asks, "Mind if I join you?"
    10. Re:It's really amazing how much of a difference by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I know that in the city that I live in there are streets I actively avoid at night (as well as during the day come to think of it) because of the part of town they're in and their lack of street lamps.

      There aren't really any parts of my town without streetlights. But there are plenty of places I might go in the daytime that I wouldn't venture into at night without a SWAT team.

    11. Re:It's really amazing how much of a difference by mirshafie · · Score: 1

      In the city you are trapped below low ceilings, and the sky itself feels infinitely much "lower" than it does outside of the city. You don't realize that if you live in a city and seldom spend nights far, far away from light sources like neighboring settlements with streetlights.

      But when you get away from those places the effect is incredible. Suddenly you see too many stars to count. You see the spirals of the Milky way clearly, so dense that you can hardly tell where one star of our galaxy begins and another ends. Just look at the sky for ten minutes and you will most probably see at least one shooting star, if not several.

      And if you are captivated by the night sky in the way you ought to be, when you finally pull your head down to go about your business, you will experience that the moon and the stars actually light up the contours of the objects around you and on the ground sufficiently. The beauty of this is enough to drive me away from cities. I can't stand them.

    12. Re:It's really amazing how much of a difference by Tetsujin · · Score: 1

      I agree, something that really pisses me off is people who use torches outside at night.

      A few weeks ago me and some mates took a shortcut through the cemetery, the place is huge so it makes allot more sense to walk through than to walk a few miles around the outside. Some of my mates kept using small key ring torches of course they ignore my advice that it is better to simply not use them, like all humans they ignore logic and a few of them managed to walk into low hung tree branches, trip on solid objects and a variety of other things. I walked about 100meters ahead of them and could see as clear as day the whole way through without injuring myself.

      Well, it's different in a cemetery - what with all the voices of the unrestful dead whispering to you. It really all depends on whether you disturb them, whether they will guide you truly or lead you astray.

      Elsewhere, it's better to rely on your own senses.

      --
      Bow-ties are cool.
    13. Re:It's really amazing how much of a difference by ShannaraFan · · Score: 1

      Most people in central Ohio (hell, all of Ohio) only know stars as being "them thar shiny doohickies up'n that thar sky". Thankfully I escaped 10 years ago to another state.

    14. Re:It's really amazing how much of a difference by Rei · · Score: 1

      [quote]Near a city, thats easy to do ;)[/quote]

      No kidding. When I'm driving around eastern Iowa at night (which you'd think wouldn't be very light polluted... but you'd be sadly mistaken), it's easy to find out where I am: I just look for the light domes on the horizon adding their orange glow to the sky. The bigger the light dome, the bigger the city. "Oh, there's Cedar Rapids, and there's Iowa City....". Even small towns are pretty visible.

      --
      "99 dead duelists of Dios on the wall. 99 dead duelists of Dios! Take one's ring, pass it around..."
    15. Re:It's really amazing how much of a difference by Rei · · Score: 1

      Amen to that. Some day I hope to retire to the Rockies, some place with enough "rugged" around me that there's no area to build big cities so light domes will never encroach too much. My dream bedroom has a big glass dome right over the bed.

      --
      "99 dead duelists of Dios on the wall. 99 dead duelists of Dios! Take one's ring, pass it around..."
    16. Re:It's really amazing how much of a difference by Dan541 · · Score: 1

      Blinding your self with a torch so you can't see the graves is a sure way to end up walking into one.

      --
      An SQL query goes to a bar, walks up to a table and asks, "Mind if I join you?"
    17. Re:It's really amazing how much of a difference by Tetsujin · · Score: 1

      Blinding your self with a torch so you can't see the graves is a sure way to end up walking into one.

      I don't doubt it. But there's the whole voices of the dead thing to consider. They speak to you, tell you to... do things... Things that aren't right!

      --
      Bow-ties are cool.
  3. beauty of light pollution by mugnyte · · Score: 1

    using pretty art to highlight "pollution" seems incongruous. shouldn't it be more intriguing and a little repulsive?

  4. Protecting the sky is possible by Bragador · · Score: 4, Interesting

    Here in Quebec, one of our parks is actually also protecting the sky. It's a world premier and it is possible. Also, having more efficient lighting saves money so everyone is much more happy from it. http://www.sepaq.com/En/Pages/COM/popUp.cfm?no=588

    1. Re:Protecting the sky is possible by Arthur+Grumbine · · Score: 0, Flamebait

      Here in Quebec, one of our parks is actually also protecting the sky...

      I wasn't even aware the sky was in danger! I thought is was just our (and astronomers') view of it that was at risk...
      Quick, rally the troops! We only have one sky and if its in danger, we better channel all available resources to make sure it goes on the endangered species list!! Also, we should find a preserve where it can stay until it recovers from the ghastly wounds we've been tearing in it every night.

      All joking aside, though, my dad is an avid amateur astronomer living in the middle of one of the largest metropolitan areas in the country, but you don't see him complaining. The main reason? The far greatest concern for amateur astronomers isn't light pollution (there are tons of fantastic filters/optics you can get to easily decrease its effect), but rather atmospheric turbulence. This is why the Mt. Wilson observatory (just outside Pasadena) is still one of the best viewing areas on the West Coast. Oh - did I interrupt the championing of a new quasi-environmental cause that helps people feel they have purpose in life? My bad, please continue...

      --
      Now that I think about it, I'm pretty sure everything I just said is completely wrong.
    2. Re:Protecting the sky is possible by Score+Whore · · Score: 1

      I thought is was just our (and astronomers') view of it that was at risk...

      That and the turtles. Sea turtles are thrown off by city glow on the coast lines. Confuses them as when it's time to mate and what not.

      And being "one of the best viewing sites on the West Coast" really isn't all that much to be proud about. Go inland a few hundred miles to the high desert, say Flagstaff, AZ. Then come tell us how wonderful the coastal mountains of California are for viewing.

  5. Dark Sky Parks by notseamus · · Score: 5, Interesting

    In Galloway in Scotland, the local tourist board is trying to set up a dark sky park. The area that they're planning to open it is apparently the darkest place in Europe.

    There are already two in the US, in Utah (http://www.nps.gov/nabr/parknews/news040507.htm) and Northern Pennsylvania (http://www.dcnr.state.pa.us/stateparks/parks/cherrysprings.aspx). This BLDGBLOG article mentions suggests World Heritage sites for experiencing darkness, set up to protect dark areas: http://bldgblog.blogspot.com/2008/12/dark-sky-park.html

    I recently visited Poland (Krakow) and there the level of street lighting was a lot lower, resulting in reduced light pollution. Streets were mostly lit with light reflected from buildings. It's surprising to be able to see the night sky from the middle of a city of 1 million. It's not comparable to countryside darkness by any means, but it really changes the character of a city.

    --
    I dreamed of Freud: What does this mean?
    1. Re:Dark Sky Parks by dave420 · · Score: 2

      I was lucky enough to be in northern Cyprus when the power for almost the entire country went out. After a few minutes the black sky turned almost completely white. I'd give an awful lot to see that again.

    2. Re:Dark Sky Parks by conureman · · Score: 2, Interesting

      One of the phenomena I observed while enjoying the Northridge Earthquake of '94 was a starry sky over Los Angeles. It'd be nice if the engineers could sell new lights to our cities that would allow that again.

      --
      The cost of that cleanup, of course, will be borne by taxpayers, not industry.
    3. Re:Dark Sky Parks by digitig · · Score: 1

      In Galloway in Scotland, the local tourist board is trying to set up a dark sky park. The area that they're planning to open it is apparently the darkest place in Europe.

      I can believe that. I was there for New Year, and the view of the night sky was stunning.

      --
      Quidnam Latine loqui modo coepi?
  6. Please turn off the lights! by Vinegar+Joe · · Score: 1, Funny

    They'll attract Vulcans and other alien riff-raff!

    --
    "The average reporter we talk to is 27 years old......They literally know nothing." - Ben Rhodes
  7. Red lights by Bragador · · Score: 5, Interesting

    Whenever I explain your point to other people, they look at me like I'm from another planet. I usually tell them that if they really want lights, they should use red lights and explain to them why it doesn't ruin their night vision and why astronomers and photolabs use red lights.

    1. Re:Red lights by drolli · · Score: 2, Informative

      I always believed the color of lights in the photo labs has something to do with the insensitivity of the photo paper.

    2. Re:Red lights by Bragador · · Score: 1

      You're making me doubt. I'll have to check. I always understood it was because the red light was weaker.

    3. Re:Red lights by MichaelSmith · · Score: 1

      I believe red lights are used by the military where people need to keep their night vision.

    4. Re:Red lights by Mozk · · Score: 1

      That's true, but it's also true that the rod cells, the cells in the retina primarily responsibly for night vision, are insensitive to red light with wavelengths longer than around 640, especially at low intensities. So your eyes stay adapted to the low illumination conditions even in its presence. This also explains the Purkinje effect whereby in low illumination conditions the cone cells, which perceive color, become inactive, while the rod cells, which are sensitive to greens and blues but not reds, become active, leaving reds to appear duller.

      --
      No existe.
    5. Re:Red lights by Rei · · Score: 3, Interesting

      Red lights are used by people with telescopes. This page has a good bit of detail on the biology behind night vision and different colors. The basic summary? If you want fast dark adaptation, use blue-green. If you want to see detail and can afford to lose peripheral vision, use very low level deep red. For general walking-around light. blue-green with enough red to get rid of the night blind spot (or dim white). If you need to see color, dim white.

      --
      "99 dead duelists of Dios on the wall. 99 dead duelists of Dios! Take one's ring, pass it around..."
    6. Re:Red lights by fireman+sam · · Score: 4, Informative

      correct. The pupil is effected (affected? - who gives a fsck) by the blue scale. The use of a red light for night time map reading etc allows the pupil to remain open and there is no visibility lost when the light is switched off.

      Try for yourself. Get a torch and a red filter and a blue filter. Go out at night and let your eyes get used to the darkness. Shine the torch through the red filter such that you cannot see any white lite. You will be able to see quite well after you switch the torch off. Now try with the blue filter. Once you switch the torch off you will have to wait until your eyes adjust to the darkness again.

      --
      it is only after a long journey that you know the strength of the horse.
    7. Re:Red lights by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I also read that red is less noticeable by the enemies, so it's easier to read a map without giving your position.

      Related: Y'know, they could bring this concept back to domestic/portable appliances, who fell in love with blue LEDs lately. I hate'em, and I heard there is research showing is the most annoying color for the human eye at night, but I'm to lazy to google it now.

    8. Re:Red lights by Dahamma · · Score: 5, Funny

      Try for yourself. Get a torch and a red filter and a blue filter. Go out at night and let your eyes get used to the darkness. Shine the torch through the red filter such that you cannot see any white lite. You will be able to see quite well after you switch the torch off.

      I tried, this - but not realizing you weren't American, I ended up setting both the red and blue filters on fire, and then badly burning myself trying to switch the torch off.

      But is it my fault? I think not - you are the one named fireman sam, so I would have thought you'd have been a bit more responsible!

    9. Re:Red lights by iknowcss · · Score: 2, Insightful

      I think you're both sort of right. The photo paper is insensitive to the red light because the photons in red light carry less energy per photon and can't alter the chemical structure of the crystal halides in the emulsion. I think, at least. Photo + chem + physics = my reasoning

      --
      Life is rarely fair. Cherish the moments when there is a right answer.
    10. Re:Red lights by Grishnakh · · Score: 1

      Related: Y'know, they could bring this concept back to domestic/portable appliances, who fell in love with blue LEDs lately. I hate'em, and I heard there is research showing is the most annoying color for the human eye at night, but I'm to lazy to google it now.

      That's probably true, but that makes me wonder, why are you using domestic (like kitchen?) appliances in the dark?

      Blue LEDs are fine for indicator lights on things that you normally use in lighted areas. Would I want them on my alarm clock? Hell no, but those seem to still use red LEDs, even though green and amber ones have been available for ages.

      The main problem with blue, especially at night, is that the human eye can't resolve it very well, and it's a blur. There's some stupid credit union here in Phoenix called "Desert Schools" CU, and on their main building near the airport, some moron had the bright idea of making the big sign on the top of the building consist of big, blue, lighted letters. So when you drive by it and look at it, it's nearly impossible to actually read their name; it just looks like a big blur. Luckily, I personally use a different local credit union, where they're smart enough to not make their signs and logos out of blue letters.

    11. Re:Red lights by Jaknet · · Score: 1

      I always believed the color of lights in the photo labs has something to do with the insensitivity of the photo paper.

      Red lights help with not destroying your night vision and regards photo labs red lights are used when developing/handling black and white photos as the paper and negatives are not affected by the red light, but when developing/handling colour film it has to be done with the paper/negatives kept in complete darkness.

    12. Re:Red lights by sFurbo · · Score: 1

      No, it is not the pupil, it contracts just as much in red light as in blue light, but the red light doesn't effect the rods, which therefor isn't desinsitized, so the nightvision returns in the time it takes the pupil to relax, which is a couple of seconds, in stead of the time it takes for the rods to resensitize, which is in the order of a quarter of an hour.

    13. Re:Red lights by digitig · · Score: 1

      That's probably true, but that makes me wonder, why are you using domestic (like kitchen?) appliances in the dark?

      The network drive that I use for backup at home has a huge blue LED light that flashes to show it's working. It needs to be plugged in to the router, which is in my bedroom, and the bright blue flashing light was really annoying. Rather than redo my house's telephone and ethernet cabling, I just covered it with a few layers of duct tape. There is just no reason for the light to be blue -- or for that matter for the light to be there at all: my computer tells me if it can't access a network drive!

      --
      Quidnam Latine loqui modo coepi?
    14. Re:Red lights by RickL · · Score: 1

      I'm a red light, you insensitive photo...nevermind.

    15. Re:Red lights by Thelasko · · Score: 1

      The use of a red light for night time map reading etc allows the pupil to remain open and there is no visibility lost when the light is switched off.

      Anybody know where I can get a red map light for my car?

      --
      One of our competitors trademarked the term "hypothesis". From now on, we will call them "boneheaded ideas".
    16. Re:Red lights by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Did you use a blowtorch or something?
      I think Sam meant to use a torch light, or flashlight instead.

    17. Re:Red lights by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The pupil is effected (affected? - who gives a fsck) by the blue scale.

      affected

      You affect something to cause an effect.

    18. Re:Red lights by Grishnakh · · Score: 1

      It would be easy enough to take it apart, and solder a different-color LED on there.

    19. Re:Red lights by digitig · · Score: 1

      It would invalidate the warranty, though.

      --
      Quidnam Latine loqui modo coepi?
    20. Re:Red lights by Chosen+Reject · · Score: 1

      The stupid Rock Band wireless guitar sensors continue flashing blue while my Wii is on standby. When the lights are on in that room I barely notice them, but with the lights off and a dark scene on the TV, after a while it was giving me a headache.

      Blue LEDs are showing up everywhere. At first I liked them more because I'm red/green color blind and having a light that was more easily distinguishable was great. But more and more they are becoming a major annoyance. Of course, another annoyance is that I can't turn off the Wii from the Wiimotes, and/or that those lights keep flashing when it's on standby.

      --
      Stop Global Warming!
      Just say no to irreversible processes!
    21. Re:Red lights by lucifuge31337 · · Score: 1

      That is correct (for black and white paper). But it was originally engineered that way because of Bragador's point.

      --
      Do not fold, spindle or mutilate.
    22. Re:Red lights by Mr.+Firewall · · Score: 1

      That is correct, even if it's obsolete.

      Fifty years ago, when I first started doing photo/darkroom work, the safelights were red. Not for the humans, but because the emulsions on B&W photo papers of that time could not "see" red light.

      Time went on, and about forty years ago we were using safelights that were more yellow than red, because with the then-new B&W photo papers it was that color that they could not see.

      For color work, the safelights appear to me to be a really wierd greenish color.

      So it all depended upon what kind of photo paper you were using, but it always had to do with which color the paper could not see.

      After fifty years, I finally went digital a coupla months ago. I kinda miss the old darkroom environment, but not enough to go back to it!

      --
      In times of universal deceit, telling the truth gets you modded -1 Troll
    23. Re:Red lights by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It's not related to pupil dilation it's because of the sensitivity spectrum of rods (the receptors used in scotopic, low-light level, vision.)

      Red light doesn't activate the rods so much (meaning that they aren't depleted when it comes to night-vision) but still enables vision via the relevant cones (light receptors used in 'phototopic' vision and sensitive to either Red, Green or Blue, light broadly). It's also this effect which is why you see a blue shift as your eyes adjust to night vision - your brain is still trying to garner colour information and for a sort period inteprets the rod data not just as brightness but also blueness.

  8. Don't fall for their lies by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The Illuminati plan to darken the skies for our enjoyment is just a front for their program to take over the world.

  9. Absolutely, lets end civilization by GottliebPins · · Score: 1, Insightful

    Think how much easier it would be to see the stars if we just stopped making electricity. The night skies would be black like they were a thousand years ago. We could all go back to living in caves and wearing fur, no wait, we can't kill animals, and wearing fur is evil and sit by the fire, no burning wood produces CO2, so we'll sit in our dark caves, huddled together to stay warm and slowly starve to death. But then there wouldn't be anyone to look up at the stars. And that is the true goal of "environmentalism".

    1. Re:Absolutely, lets end civilization by Daniel+Dvorkin · · Score: 4, Insightful

      The goal of environmentalism is to improve the quality of life for human beings -- to ensure that our environment, which by definition is everything that surrounds us, is a healthy and pleasant place to live. I'm not sure what it is about this that raises your ire.

      --
      The correlation between ignorance of statistics and using "correlation is not causation" as an argument is close to 1.
    2. Re:Absolutely, lets end civilization by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

        Wow, somebody's been reading a bit too much political rhetoric. You tell this story 'round the campfire?

    3. Re:Absolutely, lets end civilization by sexconker · · Score: 1, Funny

      You sick fuck. There will no huddling in my cave. Think of the children!

    4. Re:Absolutely, lets end civilization by fiannaFailMan · · Score: 5, Funny

      Think how much easier it would be to see the stars if we just stopped making electricity. The night skies would be black like they were a thousand years ago. We could all go back to living in caves and wearing fur, no wait, we can't kill animals, and wearing fur is evil and sit by the fire, no burning wood produces CO2, so we'll sit in our dark caves, huddled together to stay warm and slowly starve to death. But then there wouldn't be anyone to look up at the stars. And that is the true goal of "environmentalism".

      Are you on a mission to pack the maximum amount of gibberish and straw men into a single post?

      --
      Drill baby drill - on Mars
    5. Re:Absolutely, lets end civilization by Daniel+Dvorkin · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Oh no, you've uncovered our evil plan! And we would have got away with it, too, if it weren't for you darn /.ers!

      GMAFB. Environmentalists don't want people to starve to death any more than anti-environmentalists want people to choke to death on pollution. Pretty much everyone (well, everyone sane, anyway) wants steady food production, clean air and water, a healthy economy, thriving wildlife, etc.; we simply disagree about the best ways to accomplish these goals and resolve the conflicts which sometimes occur between them. If you want to talk about specific issues and ways you think we can do better than the current approach, go ahead. If all you can do is throw out blanket accusations, you have nothing of value to contribute to the discussion.

      --
      The correlation between ignorance of statistics and using "correlation is not causation" as an argument is close to 1.
    6. Re:Absolutely, lets end civilization by LingNoi · · Score: 3, Insightful

      If you want to talk about specific issues and ways you think we can do better than the current approach, go ahead.

      That's great, get back to me when Greenpeace and the World Wildlife foundation stop lying and want to join in real scientific debate rather then scaremongering.

    7. Re:Absolutely, lets end civilization by catbertscousin · · Score: 1

      If you want to talk about specific issues and ways you think we can do better than the current approach, go ahead.

      The problem is that eco-terrorists give environmentalism a bad name. I turn on the TV and see reports of groups attacking whaling boats with molotov cocktails and spiking trees so they can't be harvested and think "Wow, look at them attack ordinary workers just doing their jobs, not hurting anyone. Those people are dangerous." I'm in favor of taking care of the environment (we do live here, after all) but I think the measures the extremest groups take are inexcusable. The problem is, they do it in the name of environmentalism.

      --
      No good deed goes unpunished. - Avon, Blake's 7
    8. Re:Absolutely, lets end civilization by sexconker · · Score: 1

      Why are so many environmental groups afraid of genetically modified food? Why do they picket outside grocery markets, calling it "Frankenfood"? Why do they want it banned, and not just labeled for choice?

      The result of not using genetically modified food is that billions will starve / die of malnutrition.

      I can talk about plenty of specific issues, but blanket accusations in this case are apt, because it's always the same bullshit with environmentalists.

    9. Re:Absolutely, lets end civilization by Daniel+Dvorkin · · Score: 1

      [nodding] And polluters dump toxic crap into our air, water, and soil in the name of economic efficiency -- "it would cost too much to clean up" -- and then turn around and pay lobbyists millions of dollars to fight laws designed to prevent them from doing so. Which is just as extreme as groups like Earth First! spiking trees or setting SUV dealerships on fire, not to mention that it does a lot more damage to a lot more people. So how about we acknowledge that there are fuckheads on both sides of the argument, and then we non-fuckheads can work to find real solutions to real problems?

      --
      The correlation between ignorance of statistics and using "correlation is not causation" as an argument is close to 1.
  10. Not just about turning off the lights by Monkey_Genius · · Score: 2, Interesting

    Light pollution is just one of the by-products of industrialization. Fifteen-hundred years ago the air was a lot cleaner, hence more transparent which means more starlight/moonlight reaches the surface at night, than it is today -less soot, smoke, dirt, suspended aerosols, smog- so much so it is estimated, that the light from the stars alone would have enough to read a newspaper by -had newspapers existed then. If we want to see the sky as Galileo saw it, we're going to need more than just turning off the lights to do so.

    --
    I've got your sig, right here.
    1. Re:Not just about turning off the lights by bunratty · · Score: 2, Informative

      Global dimming doesn't have as much of an effect as you imply. From 1960 to 1990, there was a 4% reduction in light reaching the Earth's surface due to global dimming. Since 1990, global dimming has been decreasing, so there's an increase in light getting through the atmosphere. The total global dimming now seems to be about 10%.

      --
      What a fool believes, he sees, no wise man has the power to reason away.
    2. Re:Not just about turning off the lights by MichaelSmith · · Score: 2, Informative

      Light pollution is just one of the by-products of industrialization.

      Close to my house the Bolte Bridge is a massive source of light pollution because it is illuminated from below by lights which point up. Environmentalists complained, pointing to design standards which specify how such lighting should be done, but noting came of it.

      Sometimes we just have to not do stupid things, like pumping light into outer space, which has plenty of light already.

    3. Re:Not just about turning off the lights by actionbastard · · Score: 5, Interesting

      Global dimming specifically measures the reduction in the amount of sunlight that reaches the surface of the Earth because of atmospheric aerosols. It has only been measured for fifty or so years and does not take into account the reduction in surface irradiance that has occurred because of natural or man-made causes in the the nearly two hundred years prior to when record keeping started. Aerosol Optical Depth as well as 'plain old' Optical Depth, are measures of the transparency of an optical medium -like the atmosphere- at optical wavelengths and have a greater effect on dim, point-sources, of light -such as stars- than they do on brighter extended sources of light -the Moon and the Sun- since small aerosol particles in the atmosphere have a greater tendency to scatter the light -which reduces the apparent brightness and increases the extinction- of point sources. If the atmosphere was truly 'clean', then the only phenomenon that an observer would have to contend with is 'Rayliegh Scattering'. A short article over at 'Sky and Telescope's" site, ties it all together. The reduction in atmospheric transparency since the Middle Ages due to man-made pollution has, by some estimates, reduced the brightness of the stars in the night sky by as much as twenty-five percent. There was an article published last year -that may have been mentioned here on \.- that discussed this very situation. Unfortunately, it escapes both my memory and that of Google.

      --
      Sig this!
  11. Go where it's dark by KalvinB · · Score: 3, Interesting

    There are plenty of areas around which are void of lighting. Often times lights are necessary for safety and although you may be able to encourage people to use mirrors and what not to maximize the amount of light hitting the ground rather than going up into the sky, you're not going to have much luck getting populated areas to turn down the lights much. Lighting helps avoid crime.

    You can't have a dark city.

    The government should just make sure they have large enough plots of land that keep the cities far away so people can go visit and view the dark sky.

    1. Re:Go where it's dark by geekoid · · Score: 3, Interesting

      yes, but you can be smarter about it.
      My street could loose 1/3 the street lights and it wouldn't impact crime.
      Lights with caps, lower light that shine across a street instead of down, and so on.

      --
      The Kruger Dunning explains most post on /. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dunning%E2%80%93Kruger_effect
    2. Re:Go where it's dark by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      "Lighting helps avoid crime" - absolutely false.

      http://www.britastro.org/dark-skies/crime.html

      At best you are just moving the crime.

    3. Re:Go where it's dark by buchner.johannes · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Light is way more effective (and cheaper) than surveillance cameras. The real issue about the light
      pollution is that most street lights are old and are positioned wrong. They should target the floor, and the light should not spread in every direction (which is useless anyway). Better street lights would both reduce costs and light pollution.
      However, it is extremely costly to replace all the street lights in a city.

      --
      NB: The message above might reflect my opinion right now, but not necessarily tomorrow or next year.
    4. Re:Go where it's dark by Have+Brain+Will+Rent · · Score: 1

      You don't need light to be safe at night - a least that's what my dog keeps telling me.

      More seriously, where I live the lights are going full bore all night until dawn and there is virtually nobody out after 3am - it's a complete waste. At the least street lamps could only illuminate downward and be triggered by motion or thermal sensors.

      --
      The tyrant will always find a pretext for his tyranny - Aesop
    5. Re:Go where it's dark by LaskoVortex · · Score: 1

      You can't have a dark city.

      Yes, all of the unscientific dumbasses will light up everything they can because they believe it will help crime. They will do this instead of cite sources to back up their beliefs--because they are dumbasses. They will also erroneously infer my conclusions on the topic because, well, they are dumbasses.

      --
      Just callin' it like I see it.
    6. Re:Go where it's dark by _jameshales · · Score: 1

      At best you are just moving the crime.

      Hence avoid, and not prevent. If I can't effectively prevent crime, I at least don't want it right outside my home.

    7. Re:Go where it's dark by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      how much crime? i've never seen any data that proves this... unless your referring to data provided by the street light manufacturers who were trying to sell their lights, or the data available to cities immediately after adding street lights in high crime areas.

      criminals will find ways to get around lights... i was once a teenage burglar--who never got caught--who would enter buildings through the front door, in the most lighted areas, to avoid suspicion. and if i set off alarms, i would walk back out the front door and right down the closest lit street!

      i talked to many police officers during my youth, even while out on business nights. and like i said, i never got caught.

      crime can only be stopped by those who commit crimes... and that requires education, both moral and otherwise.

      maybe we should take the money spent on lighting city streets and reinvest it into education and opportunities in areas where children usually turn to crime. i bet it more than makes up for itself.

    8. Re:Go where it's dark by conureman · · Score: 1

      Conventional street lamps all require Warm-up time to reach full brightness, so no good on motion sensors yet. With the cost of energy going up and LEDs becoming more affordable, this problem could be nearing a favorable resolution.

      --
      The cost of that cleanup, of course, will be borne by taxpayers, not industry.
    9. Re:Go where it's dark by OolimPhon · · Score: 2, Insightful

      You can't have a dark city.

      No-one's suggesting that anyone has a dark city. Just that you don't waste up to half the output from streetlights lighting up the sky. Better design of street lighting which focuses all the light to the lower 180 degrees would also mean one could use lower-power bulbs (for the same amount of light on the ground) and save money at the same time.

    10. Re:Go where it's dark by CoolHnd30 · · Score: 1

      You could replace them as the old ones go dead, which over a period of years would replace them all for essentially no cost.

  12. Tucson, AZ tries... by FrankSchwab · · Score: 4, Informative

    Tucson has been working on this for years to protect various local observatories. It's also the home to the international dark sky association: http://www.darksky.org/mc/page.do

    They have a city ordinance making it illegal to have a light shining upwards - all lights (street lights, security lights, porch lights, etc) have to have a reflector. It's apparently pretty easy to police - bare bulbs are highly visible from the police helicopter.

    Seems to be kinda silly to spend your lighting budget trying to illuminate the universe anyway.

    --
    And the worms ate into his brain.
    1. Re:Tucson, AZ tries... by twistah · · Score: 1

      "It's apparently pretty easy to police - bare bulbs are highly visible from the police helicopter."

      I...wow.

  13. sprawl by Jafafa+Hots · · Score: 5, Interesting

    My neighbors are typical americans - they came out into what was the countryside (our house was in the middle of nowhere for decades, now it looks like suburbs.)

    After they built their McMansions, closer together than some of the houses in the city, using up the woods and fields I used to romp in, they installed huge arrays of sodium-vapor lighting on their houses, which they leave on 24 hours a day. For "security," or to make it homey, or whatever.

    I used to go in the back yard to stargaze, I could even see the aurora borealis sometimes - in NY! We never even bothered to replace the outside floodlight over the driveway for years after it died, but the latest thing for all these new people seems to be to have a gazillion lights. Houses, cars, SUVs, three-wheelers, all festooned with lights - long driveways lined with bright lights left on at all times.

    I don't get it. Why do people move out to the country if they don't want it to be like the country?

    --
    This space available.
    1. Re:sprawl by geekoid · · Score: 1

      So they can have their big house, duh.

      --
      The Kruger Dunning explains most post on /. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dunning%E2%80%93Kruger_effect
    2. Re:sprawl by Nethead · · Score: 2, Interesting

      I don't get it. Why do people move out to the country if they don't want it to be like the country?
      Because they like the city even less. It's not safe for their spoiled miniconsumers and there is no room there to build their new starter-castle and pico-estate. They want to live the soap-opera lifestyle and do so by incurring deep debt. Just wait a few years and I have a feeling that a lot of those estates will be dark or at least most of the lights busted and unrepaired.

      --
      -- I have a private email server in my basement.
    3. Re:sprawl by mbone · · Score: 2, Interesting

      I don't understand this myself. It should be dark at night.

      I also think it is false security. If the lights are on, they can see you. If the lights are off (and your eyes dark adopted) you can see them.

    4. Re:sprawl by sexconker · · Score: 1

      Seems to me you should've looked into owning the woods and other pieces of land you loved so much.

      People need places to live.
      Ask them to turn down the lights if it bothers you that much.

    5. Re:sprawl by Jafafa+Hots · · Score: 2, Interesting

      Funny you should say that. The house that the worst guy built in the field next door - destroying a field, wetlands, the area that deer used to cross in, where wild turkeys used to congregate in scores, where there was a stream with fish, all destroyed and moved... just finished building his monstrosity a year ago.

      The place took almost two years to build, and he finally got to move in. Suddenly there's a "for sale" sign out front. I wonder what happened.

      So, beautiful wild land full of nature and wildlife was destroyed to make room for a soon-to-be-vacant house.

      --
      This space available.
    6. Re:sprawl by mbone · · Score: 1

      I have a feeling that a lot of those estates will be dark or at least most of the lights busted and unrepaired.

      If you go to many of the DC suburbs, you can see this now.

    7. Re:sprawl by Jafafa+Hots · · Score: 1

      People need places to live? True. Though the population in this area is dropping, and has been dropping for over 50 years... and there are over 26 THOUSAND vacant homes in the nearby city, and everyone is complaining that the young leave, and people say things like "last one out, turn off the lights..." and the inner and outer-ring suburbs are being abandoned as people move into the sprawl in what was once rural and farming land. So, at least here it's not "people need some place to live," so much as it's people constantly wanting newer, bigger homes and a lack of planning to build those where the new vacancies are popping up. So here we are with a declining population, yet increasing sprawl, and huge swaths of the city turning into urban prairie, where you'll see literally two-square blocks in the city with only one or two occupied houses in them.

      --
      This space available.
    8. Re:sprawl by Qzukk · · Score: 1

      Suddenly there's a "for sale" sign out front. I wonder what happened

      So buy it (you can probably get it cheap) and tear it down. Break up the slab or fill the basement and nature will fix the rest in a few years. If you were there before the neighborhood, you shouldn't have any lawn or deed restrictions to worry about.

      --
      If I have been able to see further than others, it is because I bought a pair of binoculars.
    9. Re:sprawl by sribe · · Score: 1

      Well, hey, at least nobody will need to build any more houses near you for a while.

    10. Re:sprawl by LaskoVortex · · Score: 1

      People need places to live.

      Yes and we need to pay their mortgages when they default or bail out the banks. Man, what a friggin' socialist you are.

      --
      Just callin' it like I see it.
    11. Re:sprawl by DNS-and-BIND · · Score: 1

      Take a look at the security provisions of the homeowners' insurance that the bank requires that they buy.

      --
      Shutting down free speech with violence isn't fighting fascism. It IS fascism!
    12. Re:sprawl by Stiletto · · Score: 2, Insightful

      So buy it

      It's unfortunate that so often our answer to an injustice against someone is that the victim should fork over hundreds of thousands of dollars if he wants it rectified.

    13. Re:sprawl by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      People need places to live.

      Animals and trees need places to live too.

    14. Re:sprawl by Jafafa+Hots · · Score: 1

      A guy defending people who buy woodlands and wetlands to erect massive homes is a socialist?

      That's a new one.

      --
      This space available.
    15. Re:sprawl by Atzanteol · · Score: 1

      Hey! The one of the goth kids from Southpark posts on Slashdot! Cool!

      --
      "Ignorance more frequently begets confidence than does knowledge"

      - Charles Darwin
    16. Re:sprawl by lawpoop · · Score: 1

      That's a very nerdy analysis. By nerdy, I mean it doesn't take human psychology into account. People don't feel secure in the dark. In almost every culture, light is a associated with knowledge. If you don't know something, you're "in the dark". This isn't just a metaphor. Light is Knowing, in the psychological sense. If you can't see well enough, you don't know what's going on, and you feel trapped and insecure.

      Also, it's a hell of a lot easier to trip over things in the dark.

      --
      Computers are useless. They can only give you answers.
      -- Pablo Picasso
    17. Re:sprawl by sexconker · · Score: 1

      Horse shit.
      No location/property worth a damn would ever stand with 26,000 decent vacant units.

      You either live in Bumblefuck, Ohiowa, and the land/location you treasured so much is actually pure shit, or you're lying.

      If by some stretch of the imagination you're not lying, looks like I've got some real estate to buy.

    18. Re:sprawl by sexconker · · Score: 1

      No we don't.
      Most "suburban sprawl" is fueled by the upper middle class, who can pay for their houses. These people aren't the group defaulting in record numbers, that trophy goes to the low-income, no credit, jumbo loan-taking lower middle class. McMansions simply get more attention because they're so damned ugly, and the people who live in them (or buy, tear down, build, sell, repeat) are usually assholes.

      If someone defaults on their house, I'm all for kicking them to the streets and taking their house, car, pension, etc.

      The only people against it are politicians, hicks, and rich fucks with huge estates.

      Politicians don't want people moving outside of the city, because it creates districting problems, and people are harder to control when they're spread out.

      Hicks don't want their area developed because they dislike the type of people who typically come in, they want "their" land (land they don't own, but are used to having free roam of) to be kept as it used to be, and they generally fear change.

      Rich fucks want everything for themselves and don't want to be bothered by other people. Seeing others succeed (larger, typically newer, properties in a better environment, communities with higher average salaries, etc.) pisses them off because if other people are doing better, the difference between the rich and the masses is that much less.

      Environmentalists will often bitch about sprawl, too, but they're just doing it for the typical political bullshit. Lands that are developed may look ugly (since it's often spiraling arms of the same exact fucking house!), but the fact is the environment benefits much more from having people leave the city than it suffers from a little development on otherwise unused land.

    19. Re:sprawl by sexconker · · Score: 1

      Next time you fly, look down. The vast majority of land in this country is undeveloped.

    20. Re:sprawl by CodeBuster · · Score: 1

      Why do people move out to the country if they don't want it to be like the country?

      To get away from all of those annoying city folk who are noisy, rude, and leave their lights on all of the time...oh wait.

    21. Re:sprawl by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      That's modern capitalism for you: whoever has the money has the right to destroy as much value as he can afford.

    22. Re:sprawl by Jafafa+Hots · · Score: 1

      Gosh, you're pleasant. Buffalo, NY - 26k vacant homes. It's quite possible that more than 1/2 of them are not in reasonably livable condition, which would mean a mere 10k vacant homes. The city owns many thousands of them due to back taxes and can't afford to tear them down.

      Buffalo's population has dropped by half since the 1950s, and the whole metro area's population has dropped... and is still dropping, the suburbs, etc... yet sprawl in still going on,woodlands and wetlands being destroyed at a fast rate.

      --
      This space available.
  14. Re:Simple Example by conureman · · Score: 5, Interesting

    In order for the light to remain the same, you'd probably have to reduce the power to the lamp.

    --
    The cost of that cleanup, of course, will be borne by taxpayers, not industry.
  15. Flagstaff by arizwebfoot · · Score: 5, Informative

    Flagstaff, AZ, home to the Lowell Observatory has had a black sky ordinance on the books for 50 years now and it works wonders.

    There is plenty of lighting for the town and yet you can see stars like you should be able to see stars.

    --
    Beer is proof that God loves us and wants us to be happy.
  16. Pointless by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    This is like arguing against cutting down trees in the city...

    There are no trees in the city and people like to keep their lights on.

    If you like the forest and stars more than you like the convenience of the city, move out of the city.

    You can't have your cake and eat it too.

  17. Re:creators: nothing but blue skies from now on by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    yOU'Re one of the most persistent yet enigmatic trolls here. Instantly recognizable, utterly incomprehensIblE.

    Thank you.

  18. Re:Simple Example by Naturalis+Philosopho · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Errr, and that's a problem? Sounds like a win-win to me!

  19. A mugger speaks... by tyroneking · · Score: 5, Funny

    ... as a knife wielding teenage gang member I welcome any dark sky initiative - and I can assure you that all my victims will be seeing stars when I've finished with them (shortly before they die in a pool of their own blood ...)
    At last, the needs of amateur astrologers, penny pinching local councils, and muggers finally coincide! Happy days!

    1. Re:A mugger speaks... by Bragador · · Score: 4, Interesting

      The problem is that you only get dark corners if there are lights nearby. If not, people will see you move around in the dark.

    2. Re:A mugger speaks... by tsalmark · · Score: 1

      I used to live in the country and we could walk around playing all night at least three weeks a month. I completely agree, Unless it is a cloud covered new moon no one is going to be hiding in any dark corners.

    3. Re:A mugger speaks... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yes people should be forced to mill around in the dark or low light running the risk of accidents and crime* just so a very tiny proportion of the population can look at the pretty twinkly lights in space. If you want to look at the stars and go "Oooooo" go to one of the many places on earth 100s of miles away from the nearest source of electricity.

      *The dark aids more criminals than just teenage muggers.

    4. Re:A mugger speaks... by Pravus · · Score: 1

      That's amateur ASTRONOMERS you insensitive clod!

    5. Re:A mugger speaks... by NereusRen · · Score: 1

      Someone walking a couple blocks from a restaurant back to their car is not going to have their night vision. They won't see anyone moving around in the dark. Nor will they have much night vision for a while after they get in their car and start driving, which has an impact on the safety of pedestrians, and cyclists that don't have lights.

    6. Re:A mugger speaks... by tyroneking · · Score: 1

      Now I'm depressed ;)

  20. I don't see any fnords by mbone · · Score: 2, Funny

    Or is this a different Illuminati Project ?

    1. Re:I don't see any fnords by 3waygeek · · Score: 1

      That's why the project exists -- by keeping the skies dark, the Illuminati will ensure that you can't see them.

      If, however, you're pining for the fnords, I have a lovely parrot you might be interested in.

  21. Everyone throw a rock at a streetlight! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

    A little domestic terror could solve this problem! Umm... on second thought, maybe not.

  22. The name game by westlake · · Score: 4, Insightful
    Project Illuminati is a Flickr project by James Cann

    Is it something in his genes that compels a Geek to give a worthwhile project a name that carries a lot of excess baggage?

    1. Re:The name game by Klootzak · · Score: 2, Informative

      The (primary) meaning of Illuminati:
      1. People claiming to be unusually enlightened with regard to a subject.

      Just because people associate a word with something other than its meaning doesn't mean we should stop using the word. In this instance, I think it's quite a clever piece of word-play.

      --
      A Man's ethical behavior should be based effectually on sympathy, education, and social ties -- Albert Einstein
    2. Re:The name game by digitig · · Score: 1

      Just because people associate a word with something other than its meaning doesn't mean we should stop using the word.

      Er, how do you think language develops?

      --
      Quidnam Latine loqui modo coepi?
    3. Re:The name game by Klootzak · · Score: 1

      Er, how do you think language develops?

      Much in the way that I described, language is about conveying "meaning" they conveyed a meaning, subtly (and cleverly), to those who understand the words definition(s).

      The word rendition, actually has the following meanings:

      # a performance of a musical composition or a dramatic role etc.; "they heard a live rendition of three pieces by Schubert"
      # interpretation: an explanation of something that is not immediately obvious; "the edict was subject to many interpretations"; "he annoyed us with his interpreting of parables"; "often imitations are extended to provide a more accurate rendition of the child's intended meaning"
      # the act of interpreting something as expressed in an artistic performance; "her rendition of Milton's verse was extraordinarily moving"

      Of course it's since been corrupted somewhat and now conjures up different thoughts, (as detailed in the link)... however when performing, I will still refer to it as a "rendition".

      Therefore, when I say I performed a "rendition", it will mean something different than when a Government Security Service uses the same words.

      --
      A Man's ethical behavior should be based effectually on sympathy, education, and social ties -- Albert Einstein
    4. Re:The name game by digitig · · Score: 1

      The problem is with the statement "Just because people associate a word with something other than its meaning...". What people associate a word with is the meaning, it can't be "something other than its meaning".

      --
      Quidnam Latine loqui modo coepi?
    5. Re:The name game by Klootzak · · Score: 1

      The problem is with the statement "Just because people associate a word with something other than its meaning...". What people associate a word with is the meaning, it can't be "something other than its meaning".

      Perhaps I was careless in my choice of words, my utmost apologies.

      "Just because some people associate a word with a different meaning to the one that was intended..."

      Is that better?

      --
      A Man's ethical behavior should be based effectually on sympathy, education, and social ties -- Albert Einstein
    6. Re:The name game by WWWWolf · · Score: 1

      Is it something in his genes that compels a Geek to give a worthwhile project a name that carries a lot of excess baggage?

      Possibly! And not just worthwhile projects, relatively low-key projects too! A true story: When I was a kid, I apparently found a sturdy cardboard tube of some sort (probably the sad remains of a fax paper roll). I thought "wow, this will be a perfect thing to blow out candles with." (Naturally, this probably occurred in middle of the summer.) With all due consideration and skill, I wrote "Excalibur" on the side of the tube.

      I have no bloody idea why I did that... so it's obviously in the genes!

      (Waves the mad computer scientist's cape, cackles manically and exits the stage)

    7. Re:The name game by khallow · · Score: 1

      Over here at Project SATAN, we think you're nuts.

    8. Re:The name game by tehcyder · · Score: 1

      No, the only time I have ever come across the word "Illuminati" is in reference to the Bavarian (et al) Illuminati, as in Robert Anton Wilson's books.
      It is bound to suggest a totally inappropriate aura of the occult or mystical, and it is naive to pretend otherwise.

      --
      To have a right to do a thing is not at all the same as to be right in doing it
  23. +1 Clever! :) by Klootzak · · Score: 4, Funny

    Whenever I explain your point to other people, they look at me like I'm from another planet.

    You'll get used to it, eventually... sometimes the easiest way is to just tell them that you ARE ;)

    --
    A Man's ethical behavior should be based effectually on sympathy, education, and social ties -- Albert Einstein
    1. Re:+1 Clever! :) by Aladrin · · Score: 1

      I knew a guy that tried that. At least, I think he was 'trying' it and not really believing it. It didn't work well for him.

      --
      "If you make people think they're thinking, they'll love you; But if you really make them think, they'll hate you." - DM
    2. Re:+1 Clever! :) by lawpoop · · Score: 1

      Maybe the both of you should check out this website. It's for people on the Autistic spectrum, no joke.

      --
      Computers are useless. They can only give you answers.
      -- Pablo Picasso
  24. Quick, to PetitionOnline by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I bet if you start a petition with PetitionOnline, that will instantly solve all your problems.

  25. Cost of energy by dj245 · · Score: 3, Interesting

    As the cost of energy rises in the medium future, I think this will sort itself out. Towns will question why they are spending so much on lighting and cut back. Generally, households use all they electricity they can afford so rising prices will make people cut back. People don't (usually) run the AC in the summer with the front door wide open. People don't like heating/cooling the outside. It's too expensive and wasteful. Similarly, I think people will curb their habits of trying to light entire cities at night.

    --
    Even those who arrange and design shrubberies are under considerable economic stress at this period in history.
    1. Re:Cost of energy by Arthur+Grumbine · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Towns will question why they are spending so much on lighting and cut back...Similarly, I think people will curb their habits of trying to light entire cities at night.

      And this curbing of their habits will come to an abrupt halt once someone is mugged/assaulted/raped on a normally safe - but slightly darker - street, and the think-of-the-children rallying cry is raised.

      The bottom line is that lighting in heavily populated areas does increase safety, by discouraging those who would use the cover of darkness for their crimes. The couple dollars a night it takes to light a mile of street is well worth the cost to those living on, or walking at night on, those streets.

      "It's better to light a candle, than curse the darkness."
      -Eleanor Roosevelt

      --
      Now that I think about it, I'm pretty sure everything I just said is completely wrong.
    2. Re:Cost of energy by MichaelSmith · · Score: 1

      As the cost of energy rises in the medium future, I think this will sort itself out.

      Using LEDs may help, because they are much more directional and emit light on narrow bands.

    3. Re:Cost of energy by MichaelSmith · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Towns will question why they are spending so much on lighting and cut back...Similarly, I think people will curb their habits of trying to light entire cities at night.

      And this curbing of their habits will come to an abrupt halt once someone is mugged/assaulted/raped on a normally safe - but slightly darker - street, and the think-of-the-children rallying cry is raised. The bottom line is that lighting in heavily populated areas does increase safety, by discouraging those who would use the cover of darkness for their crimes. The couple dollars a night it takes to light a mile of street is well worth the cost to those living on, or walking at night on, those streets.

      I am not sure I agree, Public lighting increases the contrast between light and shadow. And shadowed areas are still there.

    4. Re:Cost of energy by pizzach · · Score: 1

      The bottom line is that lighting in heavily populated areas does increase safety, by discouraging those who would use the cover of darkness for their crimes. The couple dollars a night it takes to light a mile of street is well worth the cost to those living on, or walking at night on, those streets.

      If crime was that much of a worry, they would probably be installing blue light. In energy conscious Japan, in the area where I was living they were doing exactly that. I just can't see them doing that in the US of A.

      Now some people have been recommending red lights. I can only wonder what effect that would have on crime (if any.) I would think that blue light would probably be better than while light for star watching, but not as good as red.

      --
      Once you start despising the jerks, you become one.
    5. Re:Cost of energy by Hurricane78 · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Your comment uses something that he never said (slightly darker), to base your whole argumentation off of it.

      The point of this whole thread was, that you can reduce light pollution without reducing brightness on the street at all.
      in fact, mirroring the light back to the ground instead of losing it to the sky, will make for more efficient lights. So just installing mirrors will brighten the streets!
      Installing lamps that are darker by the same amount, that they gain by reflecting everything to the streets, will make them exactly as bright as the old lights, while saving energy.

      That's why some grand-parent post called it a win-win.
      But you could not afford not to ignore that, could you? Or else your whole argumentation, and with that, your whole point of view, would collapse like a house of cards. And that you just could not accept.

      --
      Any sufficiently advanced intelligence is indistinguishable from stupidity.
    6. Re:Cost of energy by Eil · · Score: 1

      I agree with you, but you misunderstand two things:

      1) We live in a society where the mentality of security and safety greatly overrides that of efficiency and scientific endeavour.

      2) If you've see a city from the air at night, you'd notice that the vast majority of the Orange Hue comes from city streetlights and businesses (large empty parking lots, mostly). Residential lighting is either too dim or too sparse to make nearly as much difference when it comes to lighting up the sky.

      The best tact to counter light pollution in large cities is to penalize businesses for having parking lot lights on all night when the business isn't even open at night. That will help, but probably won't have a huge impact. You definitely won't get any politician onboard to kill the city streetlights, though.

    7. Re:Cost of energy by Rei · · Score: 2, Informative

      First off, let's not pretend that light pollution is harmless to human health. The circadian system is at least in part regulated by the amount and type of light that our eyes receive. As for safety, there are several types. As far as traffic goes, street lights are generally positively correlated with safety at intersections, but lighting of roadways between intersections shows mixed results in the studies I've seen.

      Back to the main point of your post, though: crime. Ever heard of the Chicago Alley Lighting Project? In 1998, Chicago attempted to test this very theory: that increasing lighting of dark places would reduce crimes like rape and muggings. They took two eight-square-block areas, one for study and one as a control, and tripled the lighting in the study area. Guess what happened? Crime went *UP* in the test area, in all categories -- 77% for property crime, 32% for violent crime, etc -- an overall increase of 40%. The daytime crime rate in the study area dropped 23%. In the control area, nighttime crime only went up 19%, while daytime went down 21%.

      Overlighting an area makes the shadows appear darker and makes it easier for criminals to see what they're doing. Extra lighting makes people *feel* safer, but it usually doesn't make them any safer. For public safety, the goal should be not to make as much illumination as possible, but to even out illumination -- not too bright in the bright places, not to dim in the dark places.

      --
      "99 dead duelists of Dios on the wall. 99 dead duelists of Dios! Take one's ring, pass it around..."
    8. Re:Cost of energy by LaskoVortex · · Score: 1

      You *do not* want to illuminate with blue light. It is very hard to see by blue light relative to red light because of the wavelength dependence of refraction (See the wavelength form of Snell's law.) Red light allows better resolution of detail for this reason. Also, red light requires less energy than blue light (see Planck's law) to produce--so you save money on energy with red light. If you want to use blue light to calm people, you probably want to highlight with it. Don't fool yourself into using blue for illumination just because you misunderstood the findings of a single study.

      --
      Just callin' it like I see it.
    9. Re:Cost of energy by Sb1 · · Score: 1

      Ok I've been watching Doomsday or Armageddon week on History. They actually said that "Global Warming" maybe due to earth's wobbling and we are close to the 13,000 or 26,000 year shift. We are really close to the farthest tilting angle (move 1 degree every 72 year). Showed the stars and stuff and got me thinking. What about having 2 times a year around 10 or 11pm at night (summer), 8 or 9pm (winter) to turn off as many lights as possible for 1/2 hour so people can see how many stars there really are.? Enough time to drive out enough of most cities since can't turn off all the lights. Maybe different dates in other parts of the country to pick the best dates for there viewing angles (if it matters). I was thinking the other night that once we had almost all cars driving on the road with LED headlamps (it will be many years). On highways we could just have the lights off. They would still have them if you break down, motion detectors or something else. If on a motorcycle maybe just have to push a button on it. Expensive to have all of this so wouldn't happen for a decade or so if they are already planning on updating to energy efficient stuff.

    10. Re:Cost of energy by Arthur+Grumbine · · Score: 1

      And shadowed areas are still there

      Yeah, but as the Good Book says, those who are righteous can walk in the light. Or do you really think that the phrase "not someone you want to meet in a dark alley" should be changed to "not someone you want to meet in a well-lit alley"?

      --
      Now that I think about it, I'm pretty sure everything I just said is completely wrong.
    11. Re:Cost of energy by drsquare · · Score: 1

      I am not sure I agree, Public lighting increases the contrast between light and shadow. And shadowed areas are still there.

      The statistics and facts disagree with you, and modern lighting doesn't have shadowed areas, it lights everything.

    12. Re:Cost of energy by Ailicec · · Score: 1

      For the cost of a properly designed light, that ought to cost slightly if any more than a bad one, more of the light could be directed at the street, and less at the sky. Illuminating the sky isn't helping anybody.

    13. Re:Cost of energy by dave420 · · Score: 1

      Just make the light so bright it blinds everyone. If criminals can't see through the burned-out husks that were once their eyes, they can't commit crime! The number of wailing people stumbling around aimlessly, bleeding profusely from the face, will undoubtedly increase somewhat. Small price to pay. :-P

    14. Re:Cost of energy by Tetsujin · · Score: 1

      Just make the light so bright it blinds everyone. If criminals can't see through the burned-out husks that were once their eyes, they can't commit crime! The number of wailing people stumbling around aimlessly, bleeding profusely from the face, will undoubtedly increase somewhat. Small price to pay. :-P

      Yeah, but then we'll all become slaves to our new, one-eyed masters.

      --
      Bow-ties are cool.
    15. Re:Cost of energy by Rei · · Score: 1

      What "statistics and facts"? Check out the Chicago Alley Lighting Project and its disastrous results from increasing the lighting in a high crime neighborhood (results: crime went *up* significantly compared to the control). And your claim about modern lighting and shadows is easily disproven by me stepping outside every single night where I live, both in my neighborhood, where I work, and everywhere in between.

      --
      "99 dead duelists of Dios on the wall. 99 dead duelists of Dios! Take one's ring, pass it around..."
    16. Re:Cost of energy by drsquare · · Score: 1

      You must have really shitty lighting then, because everywhere else has seen a drop in crime with an increase in lighting. And I don't see what that crooked city of Chicago has to do with anything.

  26. Re:I don't see any s by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Informative

    Or is this a different Illuminati Project ?

    You don't see the s? I can see the s just fine.

  27. 2009 is the International Year of Astronomy by mhrivnak · · Score: 1

    http://www.astronomy2009.org/

    2009 is also the International Year of Astronomy.

    From their website... "The International Year of Astronomy 2009 is a global effort initiated by the International Astronomical Union and UNESCO to help the citizens of the world rediscover their place in the Universe through the day- and night-time sky, and thereby engage a personal sense of wonder and discovery."

  28. ...or maybe by BenSchuarmer · · Score: 2, Funny

    they're going to take over the world while the lights are off. I don't think it's worth the risk.

  29. Earthmate? by owlnation · · Score: 1

    Earthmate? What's an Earthmate? Is that like an Earth girl posing in the Proxima Centauri edition of Playboy?

    1. Re:Earthmate? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      An Earthmate is a GPS receiver made by Delorme. Slashvertisement?

    2. Re:Earthmate? by 3waygeek · · Score: 1

      Playboy? More like Hustler, since everyone knows that earth girls are easy.

  30. Must Fight the Illuminati by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    No! Don't you people see that the Illuminati are trying to take over the world by having us turn off all our lights, so they can sneak up to us in the dark. Then they will give us one vision of a bright light (LED Flashlight) before they slay us.

  31. Terrible Photos by nullchar · · Score: 2, Interesting

    Only the first photo of the Group is any good at "showing" light pollution. The rest are terrible.

    1. Re:Terrible Photos by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      http://flickr.com/photos/tragicfame/2888584708/in/pool-redsky

      That one shows it quite well too. The picture makes the star almost look like a star showing in daylight.

    2. Re:Terrible Photos by emurphy42 · · Score: 1

      Your comment was true when I first read it yesterday, but they've added a lot more good ones since then.

  32. Thats a great idea... by dkarma · · Score: 5, Funny

    railing against light pollution by taking pictures showing how beautiful it is... kind of like raising diabetes awareness by building a giant sugar sculpture.

    1. Re:Thats a great idea... by tsalmark · · Score: 2, Funny

      where do I sign up?

  33. I will inject into this thread by coryking · · Score: 4, Insightful

    My annoyance with any and all of you who are reading this and use any kind of bright hurricane light while camping. You ruin my night vision. You dont need your stupid light you fool. Grrrr.

    Even on the darkest of nights, you dont need any light to find your way around in the dark. Give yourself a couple minutes to adjust and you will do fine. If you really need light, get a maglite and some blue gels for it. Using a blue gel will let you turn on the light for a second or two while you check for the boogie man, and when you turn it off you'll have most of your night vision back right away.

    1. Re:I will inject into this thread by LingNoi · · Score: 3, Insightful

      I used to live in the country side when I was I kid and there were no lights. It used to be pitch black to the point where it felt like walking with my eyes closed.

      Perhaps in open areas what you say is true however if you're in a wooded area with overhanging trees then you'd have no chance of seeing in the dark.

    2. Re:I will inject into this thread by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Informative

      Try camping in the woods. You won't see shit without a light. Lights also keep dangerous animals like cougars away.

      Don't like the light, then go somewhere else.

    3. Re:I will inject into this thread by dkleinsc · · Score: 1

      If you're in a wooded area with overhanging trees, you still can see a little bit (not much, but you can see trees a few feet in front of you) during the summer. In the winter it's pretty easy to see because most of the foliage cover is gone and snow cover does an excellent job of reflecting moon and star light.

      Is it perfect conditions? No. But you can walk around if you're reasonably careful.

      --
      I am officially gone from /. Long live http://www.soylentnews.com/
    4. Re:I will inject into this thread by LingNoi · · Score: 1

      Why are you arguing this?

      I have first hand experience of not being able to see in the dark outside, of not being able to see my hand in front of my face.

      It's like trying to argue that water isn't wet, I already know the fact yet you try to tell me what I know isn't true. Stop wasting both our time.

    5. Re:I will inject into this thread by Rei · · Score: 1

      Lights also keep dangerous animals like cougars away.

      Cougars kill an average of 0.8 people per year in the US, and most attacks are during the daytime. You blind me every time with your d*@! hurricane light, ruining an entire campground (where do you want us to go -- a different campground because you've decided to be a jerk?). Shut it the f*@# off. If you want to deal with wild animals, carry around bear spray, don't travel alone in dangerous areas, and in general practice common sense.

      --
      "99 dead duelists of Dios on the wall. 99 dead duelists of Dios! Take one's ring, pass it around..."
    6. Re:I will inject into this thread by D+Ninja · · Score: 1

      Cougars kill an average of 0.8 people per year in the US, and most attacks are during the daytime.

      Well, the reason it's 0.8 people is because 0.2 of that person is hanging from the cougar's jaws.

      (Alright, quit your groaning...)

      Anyway, fatal cougar attacks are even less than 0.8 people/year according to Wikipedia's List of fatal cougar attacks in North America by decade. (Is there anything Wikipedia doesn't have an article about?)

    7. Re:I will inject into this thread by Rei · · Score: 1

      My stats were from 1991 to 2003. Interestingly enough, it looks like it's slowed since then. Probably people recognizing that it's a dumb idea to go hiking through cougar territory by yourself.

      --
      "99 dead duelists of Dios on the wall. 99 dead duelists of Dios! Take one's ring, pass it around..."
    8. Re:I will inject into this thread by serialband · · Score: 1

      Why are you arguing back? I guess some people like you, LingNoi, just have tremendously poor dark vision. Your experience just isn't the same as everyone else. Just accept that you have poor night vision and some of us can see well enough in the dark.

      I've walked around in the countryside in the dark. My current home is in a heavily wooded area with no streetlights. The only lights are from people's homes, if they happen to be awake and/or left their lights on. I've visited some people who live far away from electricity and plumbing and made my way, on a cliffside trail, 100 feet to the outhouse in the dark. None of their closest neighbors over 5 miles away had electricity or lights as well. I've hiked 5 hours in the dark, with the lights off, under rain clouds while out camping. I have been perfectly able to find my way around in the dark, see puddles of water, see trails, avoid obstacles, and lead a group of people in the dark. As I child, I lived on an island that loses power annually during typhoon season. (hurricane - for you mainlanders) Power outages occasionally last 3 months and I've made my way around in the dark.

      For most people, if you give yourself some time to adjust, you can see well enough in the dark. If you've just stepped out of a lit abode for a few minutes, or on a moonless cloud covered night, you will see nothing. Give yourself at least 10-15 minutes and you will be able to see enough. After an hour, you see objects 50 feet away clearly enough. Using those million candlepower lights is a sure way to desensitize your retina and ruin your newly acquired dark vision. Low power single led button lights are sufficient when it's completely dark.

      You only need high powered beams in cities that have too much light. Streetlights in cities used to be much brighter than car beams. These days car beams are much brighter than most street lights. A lot of people around me must have poor night vision since they like use their high beams all the time, which is illegal, in many states, when you're closer than 500 ft to the rear of the car in front of you and when there is a car approaching you. I don't use my high beams much since I see well enough and I don't need the trees lit up. I think some people must be afraid of the dark.

    9. Re:I will inject into this thread by LingNoi · · Score: 1

      Why are you arguing back? I guess some people like you, LingNoi, just have tremendously poor dark vision

      I guess so. So I'll be using my lights that are brighter then the sun thanks.

  34. Easier by coryking · · Score: 1

    Just buy it, put a covenant on it, and sell it.

  35. Re:creators: nothing but blue skies from now on by daveime · · Score: 2, Interesting

    Archimedes Plutonium has found a new stomping ground I think. Update on his shares portfolio at 11.

  36. National Parks threatened by light pollution by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Increasinlgy , the night skies of national parks are being degraded by light pollution. Death Valley is one park that is/was famous for the quality of stargazing of its night skies. I'm interested in astronomy, but I live in a city so I don't get to see any stars unless I get into a very remote area. So I checked out DEath valley... I went on a backpacking trip there a few weeks ago. The nights were moonless so star gazing should have been optimal. But most of the stars in the eastern sky were drowned in the dome shaped glare of a nearby city. There was even a pillar of light, a well defined cylinder, projecting straight up in the glare. It turns out this was Los VEgas, some 80 miles away, and the PIllar of light was the 325,000 watt light beam mounted on Luxor CAsino.

  37. They should use comparison photos by WormholeFiend · · Score: 2, Insightful

    like this one taken on the night of the 2003 blackout, and on the following night
    http://www.skynewsmagazine.com/pow/pow94.jpg

  38. What the fuck is an Earthmate? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Must we keep making up words?

  39. speaking from experience... by toby · · Score: 1

    Even on a moonless night, in a dense forest, you can still navigate when you are familiar with the area (paths, etc).

    It may have something to do with non-visual navigation abilities discussed here recently...

    --
    you had me at #!
  40. you are expecting a bit much by toby · · Score: 1


    Sometimes we just have to not do stupid things

    Call me when that happens...

    --
    you had me at #!
  41. How Convenient... by Palpitations · · Score: 1

    I've been tooling around with the idea of pitching a night sky proposal to the mayor and city council here... I've got some connections, and could at least get listened to. I've been doing a lot of planning based on the New Mexico Heritage Preservation Alliance's Night Sky Program... It looks like I've got some additional resources to go over now, and a great lead-in to it all.

    I fondly remember seeing flashes of the aurora from my childhood home. If I was to go there now and look to the north, all I'd see was streetlights and haze - and it's still a small town. I feel for those who've never had the chance to view a truly dark sky, it's a wondrous sight. If you ever have the chance, when you've got a cool clear night ahead of you, drive out as far away from it all as you can (In Oregon, I recommend heading out to the high desert, out on BLM land - people in other locales will have to find something suitable for themselves) - near a new moon if you can manage it. Watch the sun go down, and the sky fill with stars and planets, satellites both man-made and natural, and take in the amazing scape and wonder of it all. If you've got a telescope, great, take it along - but if not, you'll still have quite a show. It's good for the soul - and with natural light becoming ever more pervasive, there's no time like the present.

    1. Re:How Convenient... by Palpitations · · Score: 1

      take in the amazing scape and wonder of it all

      By which, of course, I mean scope. Allow me to take this moment to blame the beer, and preempt any grammar nazism.

  42. Overtime? by greenlead · · Score: 1

    Are they willing to pay for all of the overtime required for all of the extra police officers needed to handle the additional crime caused by the lack of adequate lighting? Criminals love darkness because it greatly decreases their chances of being caught.

  43. For bonus points by coryking · · Score: 1

    I recommend walking around in such areas at night while drunk. Either it was my imagination, or there really were little bits of the path I could see. I dont remember.

    My point still stands. You dont need a fucking hurricane lamp to walk to the bathroom while camping. Oh, and if you have a bathroom and it has any kind of water-based flush, you aren't camping. True believers will (correctly) argue that even a pit-toilet invalidates the claim to camping.

    So I guess this applies to psuedo-camping trips you go with when you hang out with your wussy "need a daily shower" friends. If you were really camping, you wouldn't have one of those bright monster lights anyways... they are too heavy to pack in.

    1. Re:For bonus points by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I wouldn't want to do it simply on the fact that I wouldn't be able to spot snakes or spiders.

  44. ILLUMINATI?!?! by Phizzle · · Score: 1

    My Dear Sir, the gnomes of Zürich are not amused.

    --
    I will not be pushed, filed, stamped, indexed, briefed, debriefed or numbered. My life is my own.
  45. Moon and a few stars by tompaulco · · Score: 1

    I live 7 miles from a city of over a million and 1/2 a mile from an Air Force Base and I can see thousands of stars in the sky. Mind you, I do enjoy camping out in the backwoods and yes, the sky is much crisper and the number of visible stars greater, but I am going to have to dock them a few points for exaggeration.

    --
    If you are not allowed to question your government then the government has answered your question.
    1. Re:Moon and a few stars by OneSmartFellow · · Score: 1

      Can you see the milky way, I no longer can. I used to be able to as a child, but now, with so much light pollution, I can only make out the brightest of the stars. I live 20 miles south-east of the City of London. Light pollution is a real problem. It affects animals, and even plants.

    2. Re:Moon and a few stars by tompaulco · · Score: 1

      Can you see the milky way
      I'm not sure what you mean. I live in the Milky Way. Are you referring to being able to see the galactic center, or just some of the brighter stars in the Milky Way?

      --
      If you are not allowed to question your government then the government has answered your question.
    3. Re:Moon and a few stars by OneSmartFellow · · Score: 1

      I mean this: http://zuserver2.star.ucl.ac.uk/~idh/apod/ap080104.html Of course, I've never seen it quite that bold, but I recall in my youth being able to see the galaxy edge on distinctly in the night sky. You could tell that the galaxy was shaped at least something like what the text books were saying (instead of just a big sphere) , because you could look into it, or off away from it, and see the difference in star density. You could descern a distinct shape or structure, and even a buldge in the middle if you looked at the right time of year. Now, I can barely tell where it is. That's the difference between light pollution and no light pollution.

  46. You did mean the Gnomes of Zurich? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    right?

  47. Consumonster by Drumforyourlife · · Score: 1

    We Earthlings must consume everything we can see, until we cannot see any longer.

  48. Fucking Stupid Use of Word by CranberryKing · · Score: 1

    The (primary) meaning of Illuminati: 1. People claiming to be unusually enlightened with regard to a subject.

    'claiming' is the key. Unfortunately for you and me that means we are oxygen wasters to them.

    Just because people associate a word with something other than its meaning doesn't mean we should stop using the word. In this instance, I think it's quite a clever piece of word-play.

    Stop using the word? It's not even English..

    1. Re:Fucking Stupid Use of Word by Klootzak · · Score: 1

      'claiming' is the key. Unfortunately for you and me that means we are oxygen wasters to them.

      Why do you think that?

      Stop using the word? It's not even English..

      Do you think that no-one should be allowed to speak anything other than English? Why?

      Words have power; to limit yourself to only the ones you believe are "acceptable" is to limit your own ability to use reason with others.

      --
      A Man's ethical behavior should be based effectually on sympathy, education, and social ties -- Albert Einstein
  49. African Environment by ProfessionalCookie · · Score: 3, Informative

    Here's a shot I took the other night of the sky here in the south east of Africa. Sorry it's small (internet here ain't cheap, hehe) but the clouds and trees show that those are real stars in the sky not just sensor noise. enjoy, http://edified.org/external/africa-stars.jpg

    1. Re:African Environment by ProfessionalCookie · · Score: 1

      Correction: That shot was actually taken by my friend Jared, I was just standing there. Maybe you'll find more of his work when he gets back to the states or to a good internet connection: http://jjkohler.com/

  50. Re:Simple Example by tsuki.kodomo · · Score: 1

    win win???? doesn't the word pollution mean anything to you???

  51. Jesus, I hate the term "light pollution" by Torodung · · Score: 0, Flamebait

    The term "light pollution" just reeks of Luddite bias. Why on earth is it pollution? Is everything man-made now considered pollution? Are we going to start calling cities "countryside pollution" and printing presses "litter makers?"

    There is nothing wrong with not wanting to be in the dark. Scientists, of all people, should know that. There is nothing literally harmful about the light in cities, only benefit. Pollution is not a matter of opinion; a pollutant is something that can cause a vital substance (such as water) to be unhealthful to life.

    The only "light pollution" I see, the stuff that is truly harmful, comes from the power plants that run the lights. Everyone I know calls that industrial pollution, and that's the only applicable extent to which the term applies. No one is talking about the carbon footprint when they casually mention "light pollution." They're talking about their distaste for urban centers.

    So call it "spectral range compression" if you want to draw a bad analogy. Call it "urban sky syndrome," even. But for the love of God don't go diluting the critical cause of preventing the pollution of vital resources, because city lights don't correspond to your stargazing schedule, and you wanted to score some political points.

    (*gets down from preachy soapbox and ceases "Slashdot pollution"*)

    --
    Toro

    1. Re:Jesus, I hate the term "light pollution" by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Light pollution is when light intended for one purpose is directed in a manner such that it is wasted. For example, why should light from a streetlamp also emanate upwards? The light that doesn't serve the mission of having the source in the first place is considered pollution.

    2. Re:Jesus, I hate the term "light pollution" by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0, Insightful

      light at night can negatively effect sleep patterns, and the amount of power used to provide it is enormous.... which means it pollutes, both by proxy through the generation of the power to provide it, and through it's effect on humans.

      these are only two examples. imagine how both these effect animals.

      also, light at night is blatantly unnecessary in so many common situations.

      consider the use of motion sensors for security lights! and the strategic placement of street lamps to minimize their presence. and the benefit of lowering the demand on the grid by requiring business lights and signs be shut off during hours where the business is closed. or that at least the parking lot lights be dimmed severely!

    3. Re:Jesus, I hate the term "light pollution" by Terminus32 · · Score: 0

      There is nothing wrong with not wanting to be in the dark. Scientists, of all people, should know that. There is nothing literally harmful about the light in cities, only benefit. Erm, not quite true....according to some neuro scientists, we need to sleep in as dark an environment as possible to help the pineal gland in our brain produce DMT when we're in REM sleep. The reason why the ancients probably had alot more religious/mystical experiences many years ago is because this process wasn't interrupted by all the street lamps flooding into bedroom windows at night, like we do now. It also keeps our body clocks in place. Our most natural source of light is, and should be, the Sun.

      --
      http://nathanlindsell.blogspot.com/
    4. Re:Jesus, I hate the term "light pollution" by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Actually, there is something physically harmful about night-time light. It messes with the sleep/wake cycles of critters. Including humans. We have a lot of dysfunction in the area of sleep, and bright nights are not helping. Ooh, look at that, it's 2:00 AM and I can't sleep despite being tired.

    5. Re:Jesus, I hate the term "light pollution" by Torodung · · Score: 1

      I don't know why the Slashdot censor crowd is modding these points down. I'm somehow being marked as "flamebait" even though I'm 20% flamebait and 40% insightful.

      And not a single flame in reply. Every one of these replies has been intelligent, and has brought up fine examples of why we might consider light to be "pollution."

      Go figure.

      In any event, responding to you, you echo my point. I think you can't "pollute" darkness. You can, however, see darkness as a natural state, and that we are evolved to function within that natural state, and therefore the natural state is the ideal.

      But what we are then saying is that the natural state is the ideal. Therefore, it's enough to call it "artificial light." It says the same thing as "light pollution."

      And at that point, we start having a rational discussion about the drawbacks of "artificial light," if there are any. There is no debate as to the drawbacks of "natural darkness." And what we have is a choice between drawbacks, with it all on the table, instead of viewing "artificial" as bad and "natural" as good.

      "Light pollution" is a term born of a false dichotomy. That somehow nature is good and artifice is evil, when in fact, both have drawbacks and benefits in a spectrum.

      I think the overriding drawback of city lights is the carbon footprint, for instance, the actual tritium leak that occurred at the nuclear power plant near me. You know, actual pollution, and would kindly like the "think of the squirrels" and the "consult your pineal gland" people to stop distracting from the real issue of industrial pollution with their desire to star gaze, or become latter day cave men.

      Oh dear, that last sentence may actually qualify as flame bait. Never mind. I have karma to burn.

      --
      Toro

  52. light at night is bad for the soul by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    imagine how many thousands of years man has been able to look up at the night sky, mouth agape, and in awe of the beauty of a star filled sky!

    now, if you live anywhere near a city, go outside and try and duplicate that scene... good luck!

    i've said it since i was a kid, "why do we light up out cities at night?" it makes sense to light a store that's open, and the inside of ones home, if there is someone awake. but why do we light up a city, or anywhere outside, when it's dark out?

    is it the false sense of security the light provides? is it just the novelty of being able to? are we trying to promote global warming (how much power do we waste)?

    heck, security lights, if necessary, can have motion sensors and low light settings... so they just illuminate what they need to. after all, don't police have flashlights/floodlights? don't buildings now have security stickers, and signs, and silent alarms.

    why do we light up cities at night?

  53. IDA - International Dark-Sky Association by KlaymenDK · · Score: 1

    Last year, the New Yorker printed a great article on the subject of (lack of) dark skies to watch stars in.

    Anyone interested in proper darkness, or even just improved outdoor lighting, should check out the IDA - International Dark-Sky Association.

    The image in WormholeFiend's above post is an awesome example -- but we needn't a power outage to achieve this; it's really not very difficult to plan much better lighting solutions (curiously, the problem is often too much spotty light, and the solution is often simply to use less light, but in the right places).

  54. Re:Simple Example by conureman · · Score: 1, Flamebait

    Efficiency is good, here. Skyglow is an evil thing, and stupid, in my estimation. If all those lights could be replaced with LEDs of limited frequency spread, perhaps filtering the interference could be enabled. Legislation, anyone? I am not an astronomer, but this is one more area where I feel violated, and fuck all of y'all if you think ruining MY night sky is alright.

    --
    The cost of that cleanup, of course, will be borne by taxpayers, not industry.
  55. Re:Apocalypse by conureman · · Score: 3, Funny

    Perhaps the rest of you could finally kill each other off so I can enjoy the night sky. Its a sacrifice I'm willing to make.

    --
    The cost of that cleanup, of course, will be borne by taxpayers, not industry.
  56. Re:Simple Example by Naturalis+Philosopho · · Score: 1, Informative

    Do you understand that running the lamp at lower power would mean lower pollution from power plants (as less energy would be needed to power the lights already in existence) and lower light pollution? I'm giving the the benefit of the doubt here that you really misread and aren't just trolling...

  57. Must be by Chrisq · · Score: 2, Funny

    After all a lot of crime goes on in red light districts.

  58. Illuminati Project? by sepelester · · Score: 1

    From Flickr: "(james_cann is the only person who has used "illuminatiproject" as a tag.)"

  59. Re:Cost of energy (DOJ: lights make us feelgood!) by An+dochasac · · Score: 1
    "Extra lighting makes people *feel* safer, but it usually doesn't make them any safer. "
    This is exactly what countless studies from the U.S. Department of Justice, municipalities, and other organizations around the world have shown. Here is a quote from the DOJ study abstract:

    ALTHOUGH THERE IS A LACK OF UNIFORM DATA, RESEARCH INDICATES THAT WHILE IMPROVED STREET LIGHTING DOES NOT RESULT IN A SIGNIFICANT REDUCTION IN CRIME, PARTICULARLY IF CRIME DISPLACEMENT IS TAKEN INTO ACCOUNT, IT DOES SIGNIFICANTLY REDUCE FEAR OF CRIME. IT IS FURTHER CONCLUDED THAT A DEFINITIVE STATEMENT CANNOT BE MADE ABOUT THE IMPACT OF STREET LIGHTING ON CRIME

    Other studies have demonstrating that removing lights (e.g. from schools ad night) reduce the incidence of certain crimes, particularly vandalism, "Hey lefty, I can't see where me spraypaint is going." "you painted me you gob****". So why did we populate our cities with these glare prone lights which at worst help criminals hide in shadows and glare and at best do nothing? Why do we call the halogen/mercury lights hanging from houses and barns "security lights?" Someone once proposed that the utility companies have excess load at night and wast lights help balance their load.

    But the real reason is that "feeling safer" is what homeland security is all about. Just like "feeling wealthy" works well in a keynsian based fiat currency system.

    -- I must be old, I remember when reality had a bit more reality in it.

  60. if we dont do something soon by ticktickboom · · Score: 0

    Sirius, the dog star, will not be visible in the middle of NYC. without seeing that star...umm, im not sure bout that. but its important to the Illuminati.

  61. Want to See Some Dark Skies? by aquatone282 · · Score: 1

    Go about fifty miles north of Gerlach, Nevada on a night with no moon and no clouds. Stay outside for at least two hours after midnight.

    Then you'll understand what you're missing.

    --
    What?
  62. Illuminati? Dark skies? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    They clearly just want to make it harder to spot the Black Helicopters hovering overhead...

  63. Re:Simple Example by Zippy_wonderslug · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Why legislate? If the lamps were cost effective, then the municipalities would make the switch. Right now in central Ohio the primary electric provider charges in the neighborhood of $5 per lamp per month for power. The muni is responsible for purchasing the bulbs if I am remembering correctly. If the cost of power and the cost of the bulb are figured in, the LED street lamps take an insane amount of time to recoup the cost. Even when you figure in the labor to replace the bulbs every couple of years it still doesn't add up. When many budgets are being stretched to the breaking point would you advocate for your town to install LED street lights that will cost more? Would you vote for your taxes to be increased to purchase the lights, or would you prefer that a couple of employees be terminated to pay for the cost difference? I, myself, am not opposed to the idea of installing power saving, pollution reducing equipment, but there has to be a balance somewhere.
    The shields over the lights have been shown to reduce the amount of light being thrown into the sky, but they also increase the amount of glare on the road. In order to be effective, the entire fixture head needs to be replaced with one that has been designed to cast the light downward in the right way, another cost for the muni to absorb.
    Legislation will do nothing to improve these conditions, it will likely pass costs on to the states or local government that they do not have the money to work with.
    One way that this might work is for residents, local or state government to work with the manufacturers in a test situation. Let the manufacturers perfect their processes for building the lamps and they can be field tested. But until the funding situation is improved, these efforts are full of problems.

  64. Soon enough by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The skies will be plenty dark over America when EVERYONE is unemployed and the power plants are all shut down. Except for the random incoming missile's exhaust and subsequent explosion, it should make for excellent night sky viewing. Unless of course your telescope gets stripped for it's copper.

  65. Re:Simple Example by Cowmonaut · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Sigh, wasting a good thread for modding by replying to this but since no one else has I'll bite.

    Why legislate? If the lamps were cost effective, then the municipalities would make the switch. Right now in central Ohio the primary electric provider charges in the neighborhood of $5 per lamp per month for power. The muni is responsible for purchasing the bulbs if I am remembering correctly.

    First, you legislate it since its the only way to get it done. Sad but true. Next, you only need LED light bulbs. You don't have to replace the full lamp, at least if these consumer sites are anything to go by.

    If the cost of power and the cost of the bulb are figured in, the LED street lamps take an insane amount of time to recoup the cost. Even when you figure in the labor to replace the bulbs every couple of years it still doesn't add up.

    Per the source Wikipedia provided the extra initial cost is paid off within two years just from the electricity savings, and barring a physical disaster (such as the streetlamp falling over or getting shot with a gun) you don't have to change the bulb for 20 years. Really, it is a better choice but it would require work by city employees to actually make the change happen. They may even have to do a slide show!

    When many budgets are being stretched to the breaking point would you advocate for your town to install LED street lights that will cost more? Would you vote for your taxes to be increased to purchase the lights, or would you prefer that a couple of employees be terminated to pay for the cost difference? I, myself, am not opposed to the idea of installing power saving, pollution reducing equipment, but there has to be a balance somewhere.

    Hell yes I would advocate for this. Budgets don't magically get bigger on their own. You have to work for it. You have to plan and invest for it. This is a very, fucking, simple, means to save the city/town a lot of money and power, and it cuts down on light pollution as an added bonus!

    Oh and something else to chew on: as more demand for LED lights increases, in the form of cities and towns using them for streetlights, the manufacturing process will be improved as companies compete with one another to produce a cheaper light bulb to sell. That's basic market principles. Demand drives innovation. Yet another long term economic bonus by mandating a switch to LED lights.

    Apparently the Department of Energy in the US thinks they're a damn good thing that should be improved so they can become the defacto light source. They're hosting a contest since May 2008 to create a better LED light bulb. They call it the L-Prize.

    Really, once you look at the known facts and the future potential you have to ask yourself why not? A handful of employees might lose their job? Taxes may go up a fraction of a percent? You can't make an omelet without breaking a few eggs, and you can't make improvements for the future without paying for it. To hold back on something as simple as this for the reasons you gave is petty, just petty.

  66. Re:Simple Example by conureman · · Score: 1

    I guess I was thinking about how swell it would be if street lamps were restricted to specific frequencies of output, to improve the abilities of light-filtering astronomical equipment. Not likely in this world, just a thought. LEDs will be feasible soon enough, human will is less likely to meet the need.

    --
    The cost of that cleanup, of course, will be borne by taxpayers, not industry.
  67. Comment removed by account_deleted · · Score: 2, Informative

    Comment removed based on user account deletion

  68. Gorgeous noctiluminesence by grikdog · · Score: 1

    What? Turn a bushel over the most gorgeously noctiluminescent species on the planet? Not bloody likely. Bright city lights are where the human species goes when it goes forth to multiply. You can't argue with a bower bird about the importance of bent twigs, and you can't argue with the starry-eyed on their way to a billion private paradisios.

    --
    ``Tension, apprehension & dissension have begun!'' - Duffy Wyg&, in Alfred Bester's _The Demolished Man_
  69. qbit by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    how about they stop the chemtrail aerosol program. rather ironic that they call it the "illuminati" project. sounds almost like a psyop.

    google image search: "chemtrails satellite" or "chembows"

    cue abusive denails in 3,2,1...

  70. Lighting should be on the ground, not the sky! by Iowan41 · · Score: 1

    Look, this is about using reflectors to *increase* illumination on the *ground* where it is desired, instead of wasting it causing skyglow which can be seen for 100 miles. And have more streetlights, closer to the ground, with reflectors, and you will have greater safety, greater night vision for drivers, cutting down on hitting pedestrians, and allowing people to see the sky. Those of you still afraid, go buy a sidearm for crying out loud.

  71. Call it pollution, kiss it goodbye by toddhisattva · · Score: 0

    The New Scientific Method:

    1) Find something the United States produces as a byproduct of necessary industry
    2) Call it "pollution"
    3) Get EPA and UN to holler about it
    4) Profit, sweet, sweet profit!

  72. Re:Apocalypse by Tetsujin · · Score: 1

    Perhaps the rest of you could finally kill each other off so I can enjoy the night sky. Its a sacrifice I'm willing to make.

    Yeah, but then you'd go and drop your thick prescription glasses, which would shatter into a million pieces and you wouldn't be able to see your precious night sky - and I bet then you'll wish that everybody killing each other off hadn't included your local Lenscrafters!

    --
    Bow-ties are cool.
  73. Re:Simple Example by Miseph · · Score: 2, Insightful

    "$5 per lamp per month"

    Times how many lamps? $60/lamp/year isn't bad if there's only a few lamps, but a lot of places run lamps every 50 feet or so down every decently populated street, and that could mean hundreds or thousands of lamps in an area... even a fairly small improvement in per lamp cost can be dramatic once multiplied out across that many units.

    --
    Try not to take me more seriously than I take myself.
  74. Obviously there are different constraints by coryking · · Score: 1

    I personally just keep a hobo-wacking golf-club and a hobo-stabbing knife around for boogymen like cougars (and hobos). I also carry a small but bright LED flashlight that has a very narrow path of illumination.

    I'm talking fuckers with broad-spectrum, 360-degree hurricane lamps and such. Those annoy everybody, not just snakes, cougars, forest-hobos or the occasional hobbit. Nothing wrong with pocket, unidirectional LEDS.

  75. Yup by coryking · · Score: 1

    And those of you who are "well, I need to see the child-rapist who will jump out of the bushes and attack" need to consider something. If you are walking in a dark area like a cemetery or park at 3am and cross paths with another group, they dont know who you are either. For all they know, you are down there causing even more trouble then they are.

    1. Re:Yup by Dan541 · · Score: 1

      No child would walk through a cometary at night.

      --
      An SQL query goes to a bar, walks up to a table and asks, "Mind if I join you?"
  76. Re:As Abraham Lincoln once said: by Tetsujin · · Score: 1

    RAPE RAPE RAPE

    Krauser-san raped time itself and became Abraham Lincoln??!?

    --
    Bow-ties are cool.
  77. Re:Apocalypse by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    When I fly, I really enjoy watching the city lights from the air. Losing that would be a shame. If you really want to see the sky, why not use Celestia or something similar?

    I don't mean to post anonymously but didn't want to lose my modding.

  78. Re:Simple Example by Beorytis · · Score: 1

    Outdoor lighting with good optical efficiency is and has been available, but it can be costly and when public funds are used, the lowest dollar is usually the determiner. Right now high-intensity discharge— high pressure sodium and metal-halide (not halogen)— have a higher efficacy (lumen/watt) than the best LEDs, though LEDs render colors better. Color rendering may seem unimportant, but if the lights are there for security and you can't tell the color of a vehicle or garment, you might not be able to identify an offender.

  79. Re:Simple Example by Beorytis · · Score: 1

    ...I was thinking about how swell it would be if street lamps were restricted to specific frequencies of output

    See my note above about color rendering.

  80. Re:Cost of energy (DOJ: lights make us feelgood!) by Rei · · Score: 1

    It's all about instinct. Humans evolved on the African savannah where our main predators were big cats which had much better night vision than us. We fear the dark. Our first game-changing invention as a species, fire, scared our predators and helped deepen the light = safety, dark = danger concept in our psyche.

    Criminals aren't big cats. They have the same eyes that we do.

    --
    "99 dead duelists of Dios on the wall. 99 dead duelists of Dios! Take one's ring, pass it around..."
  81. Re:Simple Example by theJML · · Score: 1

    Seriously, let's just get rid of the lamps. Street lamps cause nothing but glare and power draw. The ones around here are horrible and they keep putting more up. When it rains it's impossible to see the lines on all but the newest roads. Reflectors are cheaper, more efficient, use no power, and cause no light pollution.

    Sure there are probably areas that lamps are beneficial (downtown areas where people walk more than drive, parking lots, etc.) but highways and major roads with no pedestrian traffic warrant no street lamps. I suppose there are people that think they give an illusion of safety for people who are broken down, but in all actuality someone will mug someone on a busy highway just as much with or without lights.

    Driving on roads with reflectors and no over head lights is like a dream. Hell, even no reflectors is awesome.

    --
    -=JML=-
  82. Burn the Witch! by monkeyboythom · · Score: 1

    Since it is the 400th anniversary, the red sky could actually be the angry villagers and clerics burning down all those awful, evil, and very non-Catholic Centers of Witchery (formerly known as schools, laboratories, observatories, etc.)

  83. Morpheus told Neo is was Us that darkened the skys by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Although I'm not sure why astronomers would want endless cloud cover, but at least the Machines will be forced to keep us alive as an energy source...

  84. Re:Simple Example by bjolley · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Here is a page full of light pollution examples. Look at those and think in terms of the energy wasted.

    If the light was simply directed at the ground you could get away with fewer fixtures, lower wattage and actually *improve* nighttime visibility.

    --
    If it isn't one thing, it's two or more...
  85. Re:Simple Example by b0bby · · Score: 1

    This is a very, fucking, simple, means to save the city/town a lot of money and power, and it cuts down on light pollution as an added bonus!

    Except that it doesn't, it costs them more money. I just put in a $10 led bulb for my porch light - at 4w vs 11w for the old CF bulb it replaced, which I could have replaced for $1, the led will never pay for itself. It does use less power, but not that much less.

  86. Re:Apocalypse by K'Lyre · · Score: 1

    You're right. There's absolutely no difference between looking at the rings around Saturn or stargazing in an open field.. and looking at some pictures of stars on your 17" monitor.

    No difference whatsoever.

  87. Re:Apocalypse by conureman · · Score: 1

    Hey, I'm not anticipating a "Road Warrior" future, but neither do I believe we can sustain things to a "Coruscant" or even "Blade Runner" world. Something will seriously fail prior to that. Some of us won't make it, surely, but in my analysis when the dust settles, those who remain will have realized the importance of having a life-sustaining planet, and won't want to squander energy illuminating empty space. Perhaps I'm being overly optimistic, but I am trying not to let the bastards get me down.

    --
    The cost of that cleanup, of course, will be borne by taxpayers, not industry.
  88. So, if one actor in a supporting an idea lies by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    all can be ignored?

    If you want to talk about specific issues and ways you think we can do better than the current approach, go ahead.

    That's great, get back to me when Greenpeace and the World Wildlife foundation stop lying and want to join in real scientific debate rather then scaremongering.

    If one corporation lies in their advertising about increased costs for regulations, all business claims of increased cost for regulations can be ignored, and we just regulate while "for the good of everyone" ignoring ignoring any business statements of what the cost will be because "XYZ Corporation lied about that, you know"?

    If one religious leader is found to have been adulterous we assume adultery does not matter?

    If one Republican lies, we automatically assume all Republicans are lying unless we hear it from a reliable source? (Okay, I do the last one, but I've caught more than one lying.)

    Realistically, the odds that thousands of speakers on any side of a debate will avoid lying are very small. It's called reality. Learn to deal with better, instead of perfect. Or, shut up and let Greenpeace rule the debates, if you feel that would make life great.

    1. Re:So, if one actor in a supporting an idea lies by LingNoi · · Score: 1

      I don't really understand what your talking about so instead heres a video.

      http://uk.youtube.com/watch?v=JX9Z4nkSMBE

      Skip to 4:30 and you'll clearly see Greenpeace lying.

      If you're trying to say "They lie so it's ok for us to do it too", well I don't agree with that at all. In fact I think environmentalists do more lying and harm then they do good.

      I hope that next time you'll produce something a little more readable because your last post is gibberish.

  89. Re:Simple Example by tsuki.kodomo · · Score: 1

    it depends with the source of energy you use to power up the lamp....solar energy doesn't give off ANY "pollutants", so generally it's hardly a win win situation.

  90. Re:Simple Example by tsuki.kodomo · · Score: 1

    lol....directed to the ground...mhhh...great idea as long as the ground doesn't reflect it. And EVERY body has a absorption/reflection ratio.

  91. Re:Simple Example by Zippy_wonderslug · · Score: 1

    It doesn't matter how many fixtures the charge is per fixture, regardless of the power used. There are no meters on these streetlamps, just a fixed charge for them being there.

  92. Re:Simple Example by Zippy_wonderslug · · Score: 1

    I will agree that all of the bulbs listed above are more energy efficient than the ones in your house, well at least in mine. The problem is that street lights do not use the same type of fixtures. Street lamps use sodium vapor lamps that are more energy efficient and use different bases. The cost per bulb is much different as is the energy usage.

  93. Re:Simple Example by Miseph · · Score: 1

    And this cost can't be renegotiated to account for lower power consumption? For some reason I find that to be extremely unlikely.

    --
    Try not to take me more seriously than I take myself.