Showing posts with label Berlin. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Berlin. Show all posts

Thursday, June 7, 2018

Perspective of a facade from above

One of the systematic issues that nighttime imagery has to deal with is the fact the orientation of lights and their position relative to buildings and other objects affects whether they can be seen from above. Take for example, these two images of the area near Berlin's Zoologischer Garten station.

This work by Alejandro Sanchez de Miguel, Christopher Kyba, and Freie Universität Berlin
is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License.

When our aircraft was north of the area, it was able to see north facing facades that were illuminated. These illuminated facades are invisible, however, when viewed from the South. This means that when satellites take images of the Earth at night, the "answer" for how bright a city is depends to some extent on where the satellite was when it took the image.

Update (August 5, 2019)

My student Jacqueline Coesfeld wrote a paper that uses these images, and considers how this effect (and others) result in variations in how much light is seen by satellites from night to night. The paper is Open Access, so check it out!

Wednesday, May 18, 2016

A tale of two lamps

This photo is taken from the bridge over the Warschauer Strasse S Bahn station in Berlin (daytime street view). Good lamps aren't visible from the side or above.

Lamp comparison by Christopher Kyba is licensed
under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License.

Unfortunately most lamps aren't good lamps, as you can see in the original:

Warschauer Strasse railway at night by Christopher Kyba is licensed
under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License.

It's pretty likely that the brightly lit area under the "good" lamps is overlit, because it's so much brighter than the other lit areas. So actually these lamps aren't really ideal either. But it demonstrates the point that there is no need to waste energy and destroy the night by shining light in directions that aren't at all useful.

Sunday, November 1, 2015

Photos of Berlin at night

On Saturday I flew over Berlin and took a number of photos. I posted them to twitter, and all of them are collected below:






























If you liked the photos, please share your favorites along with this post on twitter and facebook!

Check out these 15 photos of Berlin at night from 9,500 feet up! http://lossofthenight.blogspot.de/2015/11/photos-of-berlin-at-night.html

Posted by Verlust der Nacht - Loss of the Night on Sunday, November 1, 2015


Saturday, December 21, 2013

View from your app - architectural lighting in Berlin

If you've ever taken a bus past Alexanderplatz in Berlin at night, you probably wondered what the blindingly bright lights along the side of the train station were for:

Bad lighting at Alexanderplatz 1 by Christopher Kyba is licensed
under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License.
Bad lighting at Alexanderplatz 2 by Christopher Kyba is licensed
under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License.

The lights are bright enough to hurt your eyes, and as you can see in the two photos above, their glare makes it much more difficult to see the people who are approaching you. From the side, it looks painful and awful, and unless you get off the bus and stand directly perpendicular to the lights you'll never figure out what the lights are for. Here it is:

Bad lighting at Alexanderplatz 3 by Christopher Kyba is licensed
under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License.

It's pretty! Unfortunately, almost no one ever appreciates this view, because there is literally no reason to go to the place I was standing other than to take that photo. Take a look at the map below. Nearly everyone experiencing these lights walks between the "Berlin Alexanderplatz" marker to the "S+U Alexanderplatz..." marker, and only sees the bad view shown above. To see the nice view, you've got to cozy up with the construction site:



This is architectural lighting at its very worst! It painfully unpleasant to look at from the most common viewing angle of passers-by, and is directly subverting the goal of nearby public lighting: to improve visibility at night.

As a counter-example, check out this building on Friedrichstraße:

Helios Klinik lights by Christopher Kyba is licensed
under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License.

Very cool! Different, distinctive, attractive, and with relatively low luminance. Unfortunately, it seems like there wasn't a single lighting plan for the building... A blindingly bright white Marquee at the base of the building entirely spoils the effect that the lighting designer was going for:

Terrible Marquee ruins view by Christopher Kyba is licensed
under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License.


Here's an example of boring, 20th century architectural lighting: Berlin's TV tower

Berliner Fernsehturm with moon by Christopher Kyba is licensed
under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License.

One thing I think is interesting about this photo is you can see just how brightly the tower is lit - the full moon appears very modest in comparison. The TV tower is always far more interestingly lit during Berlin's festival of lights, and I have the feeling that it's also far more modestly lit during the festival.

Here's an example of what I call "shine a floodlamp approximately in the direction of the building", the Kirche am Sudstern:

Kirche am Sudstern by Christopher Kyba is licensed
under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License.

The photo was taken from our research aircraft, and shows what a large fraction of light is wasted when architectural lighting is not done carefully. The ironic thing about badly floodlit churches is that in rural Europe the village church is often the most important source of skyglow for a large region. So the poorly designed lighting actually prevents people from seeing the Godly splendor of the night sky! European churches usually have stained glass windows, and every time I see a badly floodlit church I imagine how much more attractive it would be if the church was completely unlit other than a colorful glow from behind the stained glass.

Of course, it is possible to direct floodlights carefully, as this photo of the Berlin Cathedral shows:

Berliner Dom from air by Christopher Kyba is licensed
under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License.

From the air, Berlin Cathedral doesn't look like much, but from the ground it's spectacular:

Berliner Dom from ground by Christopher Kyba is licensed
under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License.

The difference between the Cathedral and the Kirche am Sudstern above is that instead of just floodlighting the entire building, the lighting designer for the Cathedral chose to highlight certain elements by using a large number of smaller, more focused floodlights. The lighting is still not ideal, however, both because it's quite a bit brighter than necessary and because from the ground level a significant amount of light blinds you when you are looking away from the Cathedral (towards the flood lights:

Glare from the floodlamps of Berliner Dom.

Right next to Berlin Cathedral is another more attractively lit building, the Altes Museum:

Altes Museum at night by Christopher Kyba is licensed
under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License.

Unfortunately, I didn't have a tripod, so my photo doesn't do it justice. The great thing about the Altes Museum is that the lamps are totally invisible to the public. There's no glare, and the amount of light emitted to the sky is very reduced compared to many designs.

Finally, we come to the Brandenburg Gate:

The Brandenburg Gate. Photo copyright 2011 C. Kyba.

The Brandenburg Gate does shine quite a bit of light directly up into the sky, but it is a single building in the capital of the country. More than that, the Brandenburg Gate is THE symbol of Berlin, as well as a symbol of all of Germany. As a light pollution researcher and dark sky advocate, I have no problem with the Brandenburg Gate being relatively brightly lit. But not every building is the Brandenburg Gate, and not every church and monument ought to be lit!

Now to be fair, in big cities architectural lighting is way down on the list of sources of light pollution. Nevertheless, I think that people interested in lighting their buildings have a social responsibility to ensure that their installations do not affect public safety by reducing visibility, that they make a serious effort to limit stray light, and that they light the building modestly in order to avoid wasting energy.

If you want to reduce light pollution, the most important thing to get right is street lighting. By coincidence, while I was out taking some of the photos above I snapped these examples of some truly awful "decorative" street lamps (filled with dead bugs) on Unter den Linden:

Bug filled decorative streetlamp by Christopher Kyba is licensed
under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License.
Click to embuggen.

Bug filled decorative streetlamps by Christopher Kyba is licensed
under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License.

The moon makes an appearance again in the 2nd photo. For comparison, check out these examples of recently installed excellent decorative street lighting from Spain.

Tuesday, September 24, 2013

The view from your app

Last night marked 167 years since the planet Neptune was first observed from the Berlin Observatory, within 1° of where Urbain Le Verrier had predicted it would be. I recently took a photo of the sky from the crossing of Friedrichstraße and Unter den Linden (which is close to the site of the original Berlin Observatory, but about about 2 km from the location where Neptune was observed). Here's the sky over Berlin today:

Night sky over central Berlin by Christopher Kyba
is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 3.0 Unported License.

For comparison, I used the same camera and same settings to take another image of the sky during a star party at Naturpark Westhavelland, 82 km from where the first image was taken. The sky over Berlin was probably only a little bit brighter than this when Neptune was discovered:

Night sky over Naturpark Westhavelland by Christopher Kyba
is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 3.0 Unported License.
By 1913 the Berlin Observatory was forced to move outside of the city for three reasons: increasing light pollution, air pollution (aerosols), and shaking of the instruments caused by the passing of the nearby S-bahn trains. Researchers still work the Leibniz-Institut für Astrophysik Potsdam (as the Berlin Observatory is known today), but they generally no longer make optical observations at the site due both to the skyglow of Berlin and our area's tendency to inclement weather.

Neptune is quite bright, so it should still be possible to observe it from the center of Berlin today with binoculars, as long as you know where to look. Thanks to Axel Schwope from Leibniz-Institut für Astrophysik Potsdam for telling me about the history of Berlin Observatory yesterday.