I don't think its bar at all. No other tech companies are making an effort. I'm a hard-core Samsung fan, and definitely eats over Apple overpriced decades behind on function.
Well, the Haiti earthquake in 2010 marked the start of what HOTOSM do and since then they seem to steadily improve maps where disasters are likely to strike or where needed for current humanitarian efforts (e.g. there was a project on improving road coverage prior to distribution of COVID-19 vaccines in South Sudan a year ago or so). So I'd argue success is already there, just rather invisible for many people not directly involved.
Yes always possible. If you consider the light spectrum is split during sun set and rise. So you will get more red light spectrum, during set/rise. You will see more green during night ie Nothern lights. And obviously mostly blue during the day.
The green hue of the northern lights is not caused by refraction. It’s caused by oxygen molecules giving off light after interacting with charged particles from the solar wind (which is being directed by the earths magnetic field into the atmosphere at northern latitudes.) Oxygen gives off photons in a greenish hue when the excited electrons return to their ground state, while nitrogen gives off a bluer hue, etc.
i just realized you explained the red dawn and red dusk in Arizona, far more scientifically than the urban legend that it's "pollution from California".
It is mostly caused by particulate matter in the air. Not so much pollution from California, though I'm sure a bit of it is. More likely to be dust and our own pollution.
the reason i ask is the parent comment talks about the scattering of light at sharp incidence levels favoring certain wavelengths, with the reds being what naturally is dominant at dusk and dawn light-hitting-atmosphere angles.
The answer it gives is more of a combination of what I thought and what the parent said, tl;dr version: scattering both due to just normal oxygen and nitrogen composition of the air and also pollutants (which I think dust would also qualify, though most things I could find that specified were talking more about sulfur compounds).