Launching Sudan Shahid: documenting violence and its impact on civilians in Sudan

3 min read

John Walters

John Walters's photo

Summary

The Sudan Shahid map is a collaborative effort

between the Centre for Information Resilience, C4ADS and the Sudan Human Rights Hub

Sudan documented by our teams and partners.

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The Sudan Shahid map is a collaborative effort between the Centre for Information Resilience, C4ADS and the Sudan Human Rights Hub to monitor the violence in Sudan documented by our teams and partners.

Hello World!

The sky appears blue for several reasons. Firstly, sunlight is scattered by tiny air molecules in the Earth’s atmosphere. This scattering, called Rayleigh scattering, is more effective at shorter wavelengths, such as blue and violet. However, since our eyes are more sensitive to blue light, we perceive the sky as blue rather than violet.

“The sky is the daily bread of the eyes.” – Ralph Waldo Emerson

Secondly, the atmosphere filters out some of the violet light, further enhancing the blue appearance.

Factors Affecting Sky Color

  • Time of Day: The sky is often a deeper blue at midday when the sun is high in the sky. At sunrise and sunset, the light has to travel through more of the atmosphere, scattering away more of the blue light and leaving longer wavelengths like red and orange.
  • Weather: Clouds can obviously obscure the blue sky, but even on clear days, dust and pollution can affect the color.
  • Altitude: At higher altitudes, the sky appears darker blue, and eventually almost black, due to the thinner atmosphere.

Summary:

  • Rayleigh scattering: Tiny air molecules scatter sunlight, and this scattering is more effective at shorter wavelengths like blue.
  • Our eyes’ sensitivity: Our eyes are more sensitive to blue light than violet, so we perceive the sky as blue.
  • Atmospheric filtering: The atmosphere filters out some violet light, further enhancing the blue color.
  • Factors affecting color: Time of day, weather conditions, and altitude all influence the shade and intensity of the sky’s blue color.
Oil painting of a cloudy sky at sunset

A painting of the sky

Oil painting of a cloudy sky at sunset

Photo and artists impression

The sky is the daily bread of the eyes.

Play video
Colour
Blue
Clouds
Yes
Birds
None

Image 1

Image 2

Image 3 – google.com

The sky appears blue for several reasons. Firstly, sunlight is scattered by tiny air molecules in the Earth’s atmosphere. This scattering, called Rayleigh scattering, is more effective at shorter wavelengths, such as blue and violet. However, since our eyes are more sensitive to blue light, we perceive the sky as blue rather than violet.

“The sky is the daily bread of the eyes.” – Ralph Waldo Emerson

Secondly, the atmosphere filters out some of the violet light, further enhancing the blue appearance.

Factors Affecting Sky Color

  • Time of Day: The sky is often a deeper blue at midday when the sun is high in the sky. At sunrise and sunset, the light has to travel through more of the atmosphere, scattering away more of the blue light and leaving longer wavelengths like red and orange.
  • Weather: Clouds can obviously obscure the blue sky, but even on clear days, dust and pollution can affect the color.
  • Altitude: At higher altitudes, the sky appears darker blue, and eventually almost black, due to the thinner atmosphere.

Summary:

  • Rayleigh scattering: Tiny air molecules scatter sunlight, and this scattering is more effective at shorter wavelengths like blue.
  • Our eyes’ sensitivity: Our eyes are more sensitive to blue light than violet, so we perceive the sky as blue.
  • Atmospheric filtering: The atmosphere filters out some violet light, further enhancing the blue color.
  • Factors affecting color: Time of day, weather conditions, and altitude all influence the shade and intensity of the sky’s blue color.

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