The Hunga aerosol effects in west central Oregon are intensifying, though they don't yet compare to what's been reported in the southern hemisphere.
The main effect in the evening now is a bright orange glow that lingers after sunset and ranges in equal intensity from the SSW to true north.
Last night I didn't think of doing the Krakatoa 1883 test (reading a newspaper by glow at night) until after I went to bed and then was too lazy to get up and walk to a west-facing window.
But I woke up early this morning, fortunately, and noticed what really looked like a rainbow rising in the north.
The very basic Tracfone camera doesn't do it justice. It was faint, but there definitely was the full spectrum there from red at the horizon up through orange, yellow, green, blue, and (very faintly) purple:
Now that the effect is more intense, it looks to me that this lopsided "sundog effect," always stronger to the viewer's left, is a refocussing of incoming sunlight that only occurs on the "dark side" of the terminator edge -- just as the Sun is moving out from behind the Earth (night/dawn) and again when it has just gone behind the Earth (sunset/night).
I think that stratospheric aerosol layer up there somehow interacts optically with the edge of our planet, in effect, turning it into a grating that diffracts those first/last rays of incoming sunlight, though the mathematics of why it's always at about 45° to the viewer's left are beyond me just now, at the start of a busy work day.
As the Sun moves up towards the eastern horizon (in this morning's case), that effect turns into the current unusually broad glow all along the horizon.
This morning that glow, a half-hour after the above video, extended from true north eastward and probably all the way to the SSE, though I couldn't see it from my window.
(Sorry about the unprofessional quality of these videos. Barring an unexpected boom in book sales, I'm about a year and a half away from getting decent equipment and some training in basic videography.)
We are truly lucky that Hunga's magma had a low sulfur content.
I haven't seen any scientific papers on this yet, of course, but I wonder what the boffins are thinking now about aerosol/atmosphere interactions and their effects on climate and weather.
Edit July 6th: Thanks to a summer cold messing up my sleeping schedule, I've had opportunities to check out that false dawn effect. Decided it's not diffraction since it's strongest where the terminator is "fuzziest." It's probably refraction of the first sun rays through the aerosol layer.
The sunset effects are harder to identify, other than the bright orange glow now all along the horizon.
But have you seen the images from
Antarctica? Wow!