Moon remains visible just moments before sunrise. .
Dusk is the end of evening twilight. is the beginning of morning twilight. The brightness and color of the sky vary greatly over the course of a day, and the primary cause of these properties differs as well. When the
Sun is well above the
horizon, direct
scattering of
sunlight (
Rayleigh scattering) is the overwhelmingly dominant source of light. However, during
twilight, the period between
sunset and night or between night and
sunrise, the situation is more complex.
Green flashes and green rays are optical phenomena that occur shortly after sunset or before sunrise, when a green spot is visible above the Sun, usually for no more than a second or two, or it may resemble a green ray shooting up from the sunset point. Green flashes are a group of phenomena that stem from different causes, most of which occur when there is a temperature
inversion (when the temperature increases with altitude rather than the normal decrease in temperature with altitude). Green flashes may be observed from any altitude (even from an aircraft). They are usually seen above an unobstructed horizon, such as over the ocean, but are also seen above clouds and mountains. Green flashes may also be observed at the horizon in association with the
Moon and bright planets, including
Venus and
Jupiter.
Earth's shadow is the shadow that the planet casts through its atmosphere and into outer space. This atmospheric phenomenon is visible during civil twilight (after sunset and before sunrise). When the weather conditions and the
observing site permit a clear view of the horizon, the shadow's fringe appears as a dark or dull bluish band just above the horizon, in the low part of the sky opposite of the (setting or rising) Sun's direction. A related phenomenon is the
Belt of Venus (or antitwilight arch), a pinkish band that is visible above the bluish band of Earth's shadow in the same part of the sky. No defined line divides Earth's shadow and the Belt of Venus; one colored band fades into the other in the sky. Twilight is divided into three stages according to the Sun's depth below the horizon, measured in segments of 6°. After sunset, the
civil twilight sets in; it ends when the Sun drops more than 6° below the horizon. This is followed by the
nautical twilight, when the Sun is between 6° and 12° below the horizon (depth between −6° and −12°), after which comes the
astronomical twilight, defined as the period between −12° and −18°. When the Sun drops more than 18° below the horizon, the sky generally attains its minimum brightness. Several sources can be identified as the source of the intrinsic brightness of the sky, namely
airglow, indirect scattering of sunlight, scattering of
starlight, and artificial
light pollution. == During the night ==