I'm sure I'll draw hate for this but I live in DC. 20 Jan was a weird weather day - it started overcast, then a short round of snow flurries, then the wind kicked up and the clouds started to break and skies became partly cloudy. Temps were upper 30s in the morning to mid-40s by noon.
You do have to admit, though, the sun switching sides can't be explained away by clouds. We're talking a matter of hours shift in the direction of the sunlight in less than 30 minutes.
So far this is the most compelling evidence that I've seen to date.
Not with direct sun, but at the time of the switching light, the first photo of which isn't very strong, light was being filtered through clouds - indirect. Hard to say. I'm not dismissing, just saying there are a lot of factors involved.
I'm sure I'll draw hate for this but I live in DC. 20 Jan was a weird weather day - it started overcast, then a short round of snow flurries, then the wind kicked up and the clouds started to break and skies became partly cloudy. Temps were upper 30s in the morning to mid-40s by noon.
You do have to admit, though, the sun switching sides can't be explained away by clouds. We're talking a matter of hours shift in the direction of the sunlight in less than 30 minutes.
So far this is the most compelling evidence that I've seen to date.
Not with direct sun, but at the time of the switching light, the first photo of which isn't very strong, light was being filtered through clouds - indirect. Hard to say. I'm not dismissing, just saying there are a lot of factors involved.
Clouds don’t change the direction at which the light is incoming from.
They block light from the direction of the source, though, giving ambient light or light reflected from elsewhere a more pronounced effect.