Every farmer knows that clear skys on a full moon is a recipe for frost. Have a few sections of canola very vulnerable. Was 2C at 1am last night then luckily a few clouds rolled in and the temp rose only to clear off again at 4 am and cooled to 0.5C at 6am.. I was under the common assumption that the clouds insulate, but im starting to question if that is correct. A number of amateur experiments that measure the temperature of objects under moonlight vs shade show objects cooler under moonlight. That would suggest that the light from the moon is actually a cold light and cools the surface upon which it shines. When covering garden vegetables with ole bed sheets is it actually protecting the vegetables from the moonlight and not its insulating effect that saves em?
Interesting if so, hope to take some pictures tonight with my flir thermal camera under the full moon vs shade.
Interesting if so, hope to take some pictures tonight with my flir thermal camera under the full moon vs shade.
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