Crepuscular Rays

Date:
June 11th, 2015
Camera:
Canon EOS 7D Mark II ( unmodified )
Optics:
Rokinon 14 mm
Focal Length:
14 mm
Exposure:
1/800 sec.
ISO:
100
Mount:
Tripod
Software:
Adobe Photoshop
Notes:
Crepuscular rays (more commonly known as sunbeams, sun rays, or god rays), in atmospheric optics, are rays of sunlight that appear to radiate from the point in the sky where the sun is located. These rays, which stream through gaps in clouds (particularly stratocumulus) or between other objects, are columns of sunlit air separated by darker cloud-shadowed regions. Despite seeming to converge at a point, the rays are in fact near-parallel shafts of sunlight. Their apparent convergence is a perspective effect, similar, for example, to the way that parallel railway lines seem to converge at a point in the distance.