Anthropogenic disruption of the night sky darkness in urban and rural areas
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Royal Society Open Science
Abstract
The growing emissions of artificial light to the atmosphere
are producing, among other effects, a significant increase of
the night sky brightness (NSB) above its expected natural
values. A permanent sensor network has been deployed
in Galicia (northwest of Iberian peninsula) to monitor the
anthropogenic disruption of the night sky darkness in a
countrywide area. The network is composed of 14 detectors
integrated in automated weather stations of MeteoGalicia, the
Galician public meteorological agency. Zenithal NSB readings
are taken every minute and the results are openly available
in real time for researchers, interested stakeholders and the
public at large through a dedicated website. The measurements
allow one to assess the extent of the loss of the natural night
in urban, periurban, transition and dark rural sites, as well as
its daily and monthly time courses. Two metrics are introduced
here to characterize the disruption of the night darkness across
the year: the significant magnitude (m1/3) and the moonlight
modulation factor (γ ). The significant magnitude shows that
in clear and moonless nights the zenithal night sky in the
analysed urban settings is typically 14–23 times brighter than
expected from a nominal natural dark sky. This factor lies in the
range 7–8 in periurban sites, 1.6–2.5 in transition regions and
0.8–1.6 in rural and mountain dark sky places. The presence
of clouds in urban areas strongly enhances the amount of
scattered light, easily reaching amplification factors in excess
of 25, in comparison with the light scattered in the same places
under clear sky conditions. The periodic NSB modulation due
to the Moon, still clearly visible in transition and rural places,
is barely notable at periurban locations and is practically lost at
urban sites
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Bibliographic citation
Bará S. 2016 Anthropogenic disruption of the night sky darkness in urban and rural areas.R. Soc. open sci.3: 160541. http://dx.doi.org/10.1098/rsos.160541
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1098/rsos.160541Sponsors
This work was partially funded by the Xunta de Galicia, Programa de Consolidación e Estruturación de Unidades de Investigación Competitivas, grant CN 2012/156, and was partly developed within the framework of the Spanish Network for Light Pollution Studies (Ministerio de Economía y Competitividad, AYA2015-71542-REDT
Rights
2016 The Authors. Published by the Royal Society under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/, which permits unrestricted use, provided the original author and source are credited







