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[[Image:Fargo Sundogs 2 18 09.jpg|thumb|250px|Very bright sundogs in [[Fargo, North Dakota|Fargo]], [[North Dakota]]. Note the halo arcs passing through each sundog.]]

A '''sun dog''' or '''sundog''' (scientific name '''parhelion''', plural '''parhelia''', from Greek parēlion,
(παρήλιον), παρά(beside) + ήλιος(sun), "beside the sun"; also called a '''mock sun''') is an [[atmospheric phenomenon]] that creates bright spots of light in the sky, often on a luminous ring or [[Halo (optical phenomenon)|halo]] on either side of the [[sun]].<ref>[[AMHER]], 2004</ref> (formed by ice crystals)

Sundogs may appear as a colored patch of light to the left or right of the sun, 22° distant and at the same distance above the horizon as the sun, and in ice halos. They can be seen anywhere in the world during any season, but they are not always obvious or bright. Sundogs are best seen and are most conspicuous when the sun is low.

==Formation and characteristics==
Sundogs are formed by plate-shaped [[hexagonal]] ice crystals in high and cold [[cirrus cloud]]s or, during very cold weather, by [[ice crystal]]s called [[diamond dust]] drifting in the air at low levels. These crystals act as prisms, bending the light rays passing through them by 22°. If the crystals are randomly oriented, a complete ring around the sun is seen --- a [[Halo (optical_phenomenon)|halo]]. But often, as the crystals sink through the air they become vertically aligned, so sunlight is refracted horizontally -- in this case, sundogs are seen.

As the sun rises higher, the rays passing through the crystals are increasingly skewed from the horizontal plane. Their angle of deviation increases and the sundogs move further from the sun.<ref name="atoptics-sunalt">{{cite web | url = http://www.atoptics.co.uk/halo/dogalt.htm | title = Effect of solar altitude | publisher = Atmospheric Optics | accessdate = 07-04-1knowen as5 | author = L. Cowley}}</ref> However, they always stay at the same altitude as the sun.

Sundogs are red-colored at the side nearest the sun. Farther out the colors grade through oranges to blue. However, the colors overlap considerably and so are muted, never pure or saturated. The colors of the sundog finally merge into the white of the [[parhelic circle]] (if the latter is visible).

It is theoretically possible to predict the forms of sundogs as would be seen on other planets and moons. [[Mars]] might have sundogs formed by both water-ice and CO<sub>2</sub>-ice. On the giant gas planets&mdash;[[Jupiter]], [[Saturn]], [[Uranus]] and [[Neptune]]&mdash;other crystals form the clouds of [[ammonia]], [[methane]], and other substances that can produce halos with four or more sundogs.<ref name="atoptics-other-worlds">{{cite web | url = http://www.atoptics.co.uk/halo/oworld.htm | title = Other Worlds | publisher = Atmospheric Optics | accessdate = 07-04-15 | author = L. Cowley}}</ref>

<gallery perrow=5>
Image:Sundogs - New Ulm-Edit1.JPG|<small>Pronounced sundogs on both sides of a setting sun in [[New Ulm, Minnesota|New Ulm]], [[Minnesota]].
Image:Parhelion2 -NOAA .jpg|<small>An elongated parhelion alongside the sun, unseen at the left.
Image:SunDog.jpg|<small>Sundog in central Iowa, exhibiting rainbow colors.
Image:Halo and sun dog - NOAA.jpg|<small>A parhelion at the South Pole. The sun is obscured.
Image:False_Sunrise.jpg|<small>Extremely rare kind of sundog: the [[false sunrise]].
Image:Dead tree and Pacific.jpg|<small>A bright sundog over Pacific Ocean
Image:AlcanSunbow.jpg|<small>Sundogs and halo over the Kluane Range viewed from the [[Alaska Highway]]
Image:Sun dog - wea00148.jpg|<small>A sundog produced by sunlight passing through thin cirrus clouds. The true sun is outside of the picture to the right.
</gallery>

==History==
[[Image:Sun_halo_optical_phenomenon_edit.jpg|thumb|A parhelion at the South Pole.]]
===Greece===
[[Aristotle]] (Meteorology III.2, 372a14) notes that "two mock suns rose with the sun and followed it all through the day until sunset." He says that "mock suns" are always to the side, never above or below, most commonly at sunrise or sunset, more rarely in the middle of the day.

The poet [[Aratus]] (Phaenomena 880-891) mentions parhelia as part of his catalogue of Weather Signs; for him, they can indicate rain, wind, or an approaching storm.

===Rome===
A passage in [[Cicero]]'s ''[[De re publica|On the Republic]]'' (54-51 BC) is one of many by Greek and Roman authors who refer to sun dogs and similar phenomena:
<blockquote>Be it so, said [[Quintus Aelius Tubero|Tubero]]; and since you invite me to discussion, and present the opportunity, let us first examine, before any one else arrives, what can be the nature of the parhelion, or double sun, which was mentioned in the senate. Those that affirm they witnessed this prodigy are neither few nor unworthy of credit, so that there is more reason for investigation than incredulity.<ref>{{cite web | url = http://www.gutenberg.org/files/14988/14988-h/14988-h.htm#FNA-296 | title = On the Commonwealth, Book 1 | author = [[Cicero]] | pages = (260), 367, (369) | publisher = [[Project Gutenberg]] (literal translation by C. D. Yonge, 1877)}}</ref></blockquote>

The 2nd century Roman writer and philosopher [[Apuleius]] in his ''Apologia'' XV says "What is the cause of the prismatic colours of the rainbow, or of the appearance in heaven of two rival images of the sun, with sundry other phenomena treated in a monumental volume by [[Archimedes]] of Syracuse."

===Wars of the Roses===
The prelude to the [[Battle of Mortimer's Cross]] in [[Herefordshire]], England in 1461 is supposed to have involved the appearance of a complete parhelion with three "suns". The [[Yorkist]] commander, later [[Edward IV]], convinced his initially frightened troops that it represented the Holy Trinity and Edward's troops won a decisive victory.

===Jakob Hutter===
Possibly the earliest clear description of a sundog is by [[Jacob Hutter]], who wrote in his ''Brotherly Faithfulness: Epistles from a Time of Persecution'':
<blockquote>My beloved children, I want to tell you that on the day after the departure of our brothers Kuntz and Michel, on a Friday, we saw three suns in the sky for a good long time, about an hour, as well as two rainbows. These had their backs turned toward each other, almost touching in the middle, and their ends pointed away from each other. And this I, Jakob, saw with my own eyes, and many brothers and sisters saw it with me. After a while the two suns and rainbows disappeared, and only the one sun remained. Even though the other two suns were not as bright as the one, they were clearly visible. I feel this was no small miracle …<ref name="Hutter">{{cite book | author = [[Jakob Hutter]] | title = Brotherly Faithfulness: Epistles from a Time of Persecution | chapter = | pages = 20–21 | edition = | year = 1979 | publisher = Plough Publishing | location = Rifton, NY | isbn = 0-87486-191-8 }}</ref></blockquote>
The observation most likely occurred in [[Hustopeče|Auspitz (Hustopeče)]], [[Moravia]] in very late October or very early November of 1533. The original was written in German and is from a letter originally sent in November 1533 from Auspitz in Moravia to the Adige Valley in [[Tyrol (state) | Tyrol]]. The Kuntz Maurer and Michel Schuster mentioned in the letter left Hutter on the Thursday after the feast day of [[Simon the Zealot|Simon]] and [[Jude the Apostle|Jude]], which is October 28. (This quote is also referenced by [[Fred Schaaf]] on page 94 of the November 1997 and December 1997 issues of ''[[Sky & Telescope]]''.)

===Vädersolstavlan===
[[Image:Vädersoltavlan cropped.JPG|thumb|The so-called "Sun Dog Painting" (''Vädersolstavlan'') depicting [[Stockholm]] in 1535 and the celestial phenomenon at the time interpreted as an ominous presage]]
While mostly known and often quoted for being the oldest colour depiction of the city of [[Stockholm]], [[Vädersolstavlan]] ([[Swedish language|Swedish]]; "The Sundog Painting", literally "The Weather Sun Painting") is arguably also one of the oldest known depictions of a sun dog. For two hours in the morning of April 20, 1535, the skies over the city were filled with white circles and arcs crossing the sky, while additional suns appeared around the sun. The phenomenon quickly resulted in rumours of an [[omen]] of God's forthcoming revenge on King [[Gustav I of Sweden|Gustav Vasa]] (1496-1560) for having introduced [[Protestantism]] during the 1520s and for being heavy-handed with his enemies allied with the Danish king.

Hoping to end speculations, the Chancellor and [[Lutheranism|Lutheran]] scholar [[Olaus Petri]] (1493-1552) ordered a painting to be produced documenting the event. When confronted with the painting, the king, however, interpreted it as a conspiracy - the real sun of course being himself threatened by competing fake suns, one being Olaus Petri and the other the clergyman and scholar [[Laurentius Andreae]] (1470-1552), both thus accused of treachery, but eventually escaping capital punishment. The original painting is lost, but a copy from the 1630s survives and still can be seen in the church [[Storkyrkan]] in central Stockholm.<ref name="SVT">{{cite web
| author = Pererik Åberg
| title = Vädersolstavlan
| publisher = [[Sveriges Television]]
| date = 2003-07-10
| location = Stockholm
| url = http://svt.se/svt/jsp/Crosslink.jsp?d=11190&a=99963
| accessdate = 2007-01-28
}}</ref>

[[Image:Nuremberg Apr 14 1561.jpg|thumb|left|Woodcut of 1561 German event]]

===Nuremberg, Germany in 1561===
On April 14, 1561, the skies over [[Nuremberg]], [[Germany]] were filled with a multitude of celestial objects that were observed by many people in the city. The objects were depicted five years later in the 1566 woodcut by Hans Glaser of the "1561 Nuremberg event", that is displayed to the left.<ref>[http://www.subversiveelement.com/NurembergGlobes.html Warring Globes at Nuremberg, Germany 1561<!-- Bot generated title -->]</ref> Several of the images resemble the types of phenomenon that occur as parhelia or halos.<ref>Arbeitskreis Meteore [http://www.meteoros.de/halo/halo1.htm Alte Halo-Darstellungen I] and [http://www.meteoros.de/halo/halo2.htm Alte Halo-Darstellungen II]</ref>

===Shackleton===
In her history ''Shipwreck at the Bottom of the World: The Extraordinary True Story of [[Ernest Shackleton|Shackleton]] and the Endurance'', telling the story of ''[[Endurance (1912 ship)|Endurance]]'''s ill-fated polar expedition in 1912, [[Jennifer Armstrong]] writes:
<blockquote>… All around them, too, were signs that the Antarctic winter was fast approaching: there were now twelve hours of darkness, and during the daylight hours petrels and terns fled toward the north. Skuas kept up a screeching clamor, and penguins on the move honked and brayed from the ice for miles around. Killer whales cruised the open leads, blowing spouts of icy spray. The tricks of the Antarctic atmosphere brought mock suns and green sunsets, and showers of jewel-coloured ice crystals.<ref name="armstrong">{{cite book | author = [[Jennifer Armstrong]] | title = Shipwreck at the Bottom of the World: The Extraordinary True Story of [[Ernest Shackleton|Shackleton]] and the [[Endurance (1912 ship)|Endurance]] | edition = | year = 1998 | publisher = Crown | location = NY | isbn = 0-375-81049-8 | pages = 123 | chapter = }}</ref></blockquote>

==Other citations==
===Fiction===
* [[William Shakespeare|Shakespeare]] appears to mention the phenomenon in his ''[[Henry VI, Part 3]]'', written in about 1590, when he has Edward say, "Dazzle mine eyes, or do I see three suns?"

* The poem ''Die Nebensonnen'' ("The Parhelia"), by [[Wilhelm Müller]] from his 1823-24 cycle ''[[Winterreise]]'', was set to music by [[Franz Schubert]]. It begins: "Drei Sonnen sah ich am Himmel stehn..." ("Three Suns I saw in the sky").

* [[Jack London]] wrote a short story in 1905 called ''The Sun-Dog Trail''.<ref>[http://london.sonoma.edu/Essays/comp_date.html ''Jack London's Works by Date of Composition'' by James Williams]</ref>

* In the 1949 novel ''[[Mrs. Mike]]'' by Benedict and Nancy Mars Freedman, Sgt. Mike Flannigan, a Canadian Mountie, explains sun dogs when they are seen by his young Bostonian wife for the first time. Claiming to have observed as many as sixteen of them together in the sky at a single time, he says the Indians believe they are "evil stars trying to kill the sun," but that they are actually caused by atmospheric conditions, and that when they appear "ten to one there's a blizzard by the morning."
* A reference to 'parhelia' occurs in the Introduction to [[Vladimir Nabokov]]'s 1962 novel ''[[Pale Fire]]'':
<blockquote>The short (166) Canto One, with all those amusing birds and parhelia, occupies thirteen cards.

<ref name="nabokov">{{cite book | author = [[Vladimir Nabokov]] | title = [[Pale Fire (novel)|Pale Fire]] | pages = 315 | edition = | year = 1962 | publisher = G. P. Putnam's Sons | location = NY}}</ref></blockquote><poem>
...and that rare phenomenon
The iridule--when beautiful and strange,
In a bright sky above a mountain range
One opal cloudlet in an oval form
Reflects the rainbow of a thunderstorm...</poem>
* In the fifth novel of the [[Aubrey–Maturin series]], ''[[Desolation Island (novel)|Desolation Island]]'', 1978, [[Patrick O'Brian]] writes:<blockquote>"A visit to the cabin showed him the glass lower still: sickeningly low. And back on the poop he saw that he was by no means the only one to have noticed the mounting sea – an oddly disturbed sea, as if moved by some not very distant force; white water too, and a strange green colour in the curl of the waves and in the water slipping by. He glanced north-west, and there the sun, though shining still, had a halo, with sun-dogs on either side. Ahead, the aurora had gained in strength: streamers of an unearthly splendour."<ref name="obrian">{{cite book | author = [[Patrick O'Brian]] | title = [[Desolation Island (novel)|Desolation Island]] | pages = 123 | edition = | year = 1978 | publisher = Norton | location = NY | isbn = 0-393-30813-8 | chapter = 9}}</ref></blockquote>

* In her popular historical novel ''The Sunne in Splendour'', 1982, about [[Richard III of England]], [[Sharon Kay Penman]] writes:<blockquote>"Hastings laughed, too, and shook his head. 'Men do make their luck, Lady Margaret, and never have I seen that better proven than at Mortimer's Cross. For ere the battle, there appeared a most fearsome and strange sight in the sky.' He paused. 'Three suns did we see over us, shining full clear.'"</blockquote><blockquote>In a footnote it is clarified: "Phenomenon known as a parhelion, generally caused by the formation of ice crystals in the upper air." Two pages later, again mentioning the English king [[Edward IV of England|Edward IV]], she adds: "Many, she saw, flaunted streaming sun emblems to denote her son's triumph under the triple suns at Mortimer's Cross."<ref name="Penman">{{cite book | author = [[Sharon Kay Penman]] | title = The Sunne in Splendour | chapter = 4 | pages = 60 | edition = | year = 1982 | publisher = Ballantine | location = NY | isbn = 0-345-36313-2}}</ref></blockquote>

* ''Sundog'' is the title of a 1984 novel by [[Jim Harrison]].

* The [[horror fiction]] writer [[Stephen King]] has a novella called ''The Sun Dog'' in his 1990 collection ''[[Four Past Midnight]]''.
* [[Jane Gardam]] at the end of her 2006 novel ''Old Filth'' has the main character, Edward Feathers, see a parhelion from the window of a plane at sunrise on New Year's Day: <blockquote>"Later he looked down upon a fat carpet of clouds and saw something he had never seen in his life before. Two suns stood side by side in the sky. A parhelion. A formidable and ancient omen of something or other, he forgot what.".<ref name="gardam">{{cite book | author = [[Jane Gardam]] | title = Old Filth (novel) | pages = 286 | edition = | year = 2006 | publisher = Europa Editions | location = NY | isbn = 1-933372-13-3}}</ref></blockquote>

===Fine arts===
* One of [[Robert Rauschenberg]]'s early experiments in 1962 employing the silk-screen process to reuse previously published images in ''Combine Paintings'' is titled ''Sun Dog''.

===Film and popular culture===
*Ingmar Bergman's film "The Passion of Anna" opens with a scene showing the protagonist stopping his work to observe three suns in the sky.

* Sun dogs appear in the film ''[[The Deer Hunter]]''. At the beginning of the film, as the men are leaving work, they see the phenomenon. [[Robert De Niro]]'s character describes it as an 'old Indian thing' and "A blessing on the hunter sent by the great wolf to his children".

* The minor league hockey team, the [[Arizona Sundogs]], is named after this phenomenon. Their logo features the letter "S" surrounding twin suns.

===Popular music===
* Sun dogs are referenced in [[Rush (band)|Rush]]'s 1989 song "Chain Lightning" on the album ''[[Presto (album)|Presto]]''. [[Neil Peart]] (lyricist) has been quoted as saying:<blockquote>"I'm a weather fanatic...I watch the weather...and one night I was watching it and there are two incidents in that song that are synchronicity to one weather report where the weatherman showed a picture of sun dogs...they're a really beautiful natural phenomenon and I love the name, too. Sun dogs just has a great sound to it."<ref name="Peart">{{cite book | author = [[Neil Peart]] | title = Rush Profiled! - Presto, promotional interview CD | publisher = Atlantic Records | edition = | year = 1989}}</ref></blockquote>

* The band [[Of Montreal]] used the image in the lyrics to "The Past Is a Grotesque Animal" on the 2007 album ''[[Hissing Fauna, Are You the Destroyer?]]''<ref name="sonmeanings">{{cite web | title = Of Montreal - The Past Is A Grotesque Animal | publisher = SongMeanings.net | date = 2006-09-09 | accessdate = 2007-02-16 | url = http://www.songmeanings.net/lyric.php?lid=3530822107858624057}} (The page uses this Wikipedia article as a reference to sort out the 'obscure references' of Kevin Barnes.)</ref>:
<blockquote><poem>
I've played the unraveler, the parhelion
But even Apocalypse is fleeting
There's no death, no ugly world
</poem></blockquote>

* The British [[neofolk]] band [[Death in June]] put out an EP called "Sun dogs" in 1994.

* Athens, Georgia based jam band Perpetual Groove have back to back songs titled "Perihelion" and "Sun Dog" on their 2003 release Sweet Oblivious Antidote. They are instrumental tracks.

==See also==
{{Refbegin|2}}
*[[120° parhelion]]
*[[Anthelion]]
*[[Circumhorizontal arc]]
*[[False sunrise]]
*[[Liljequist parhelion]]
*[[Moon dog]]
*[[Moon ring]]
*[[The Miracle of the Sun]]
{{Refend}}

==References==
{{Reflist|2}}

==External links==
{{Commons|Parhelion|Sun dog}}
{{Wiktionarypar2|sun dog|parhelion}}
*[http://www.atoptics.co.uk/halo/parhelia.htm Sundogs - Parhelia], Explanations and Images, Les Cowley's Atmospheric Optics site]
*[http://www.atoptics.co.uk/halo/dogim0.htm Sundogs Gallery, Les Cowley's Atmospheric Optics site]
*[http://www.astrophys-assist.com/wilobs/weathwin/sundog.htm Optical Phenomena] - Photos of sun dogs
*[http://www.starrynightphotos.com/planet_earth/sun_dog_halos.htm Starry Night Photography - Sun Dog, Sun Halo, Moon Halo] - Some photos and some text
*[http://www.atoptics.co.uk/halosim.htm Atmospheric Optics - Ice Halos]
*[http://www.youtube.com/view_play_list?p=FF0BA1CC37E9ED56 Sundog Splendor! video with marvelous close-ups]
*[http://kavandeo.com/?p=845 Sun dogs, 4 Suns in the Sky Together]
*[http://www.atoptics.co.uk/halosim.htm Ice Halos and other atmospheric optics, with free simulation software]
*[http://cmhas.wikispaces.com/Atmospheric_Phenomena Images by Crayford Manor House Astronomical Society]
*[http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=eIlNE1uzJRM 4 point Sun dog with complete 360 degree ring in Shubarkurduk, Kazachstan]

[[Category:Atmospheric optical phenomena]]

[[ca:Parheli]]
[[cs:Parhelium]]
[[da:Bisol]]
[[de:Nebensonne]]
[[es:Parhelio]]
[[fr:Parhélie]]
[[is:Aukasól]]
[[it:Parelio]]
[[he:כלבי השמש]]
[[la:Parhelium]]
[[nl:Parhelium]]
[[ja:幻日]]
[[no:Bisol]]
[[pl:Słońce poboczne]]
[[pt:Parélio]]
[[ro:Halou]]
[[ru:Паргелий]]
[[fi:Sivuauringot]]
[[sv:Vädersol]]

Revision as of 19:37, 22 April 2010

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