Starting a Fire With Moonlight
Most recent answer: 10/21/2011
- Glen Hawkins (age 44)
Clinton,Ut USA
There are several ways to make the argument. They all rely on a key fact- that the moon scatters the sunlight that hits it into more or less random directions. That greatly limits the ability of any subsequent optical device (lens, mirror,...) to refocus the light.
Here's one argument. Let's imagine that the moon's surface was hot enough to glow with the same energy intensity as we actually see in its reflected sunlight. (The spectrum would be different, but that's not very relevant for the heating power. The important point is that the thermal radiation also heads off in all directions.) No passive device (such as a lens) could cause this thermal system to spontaneously heat up another system to a temperature higher than the surface temperature. How hot would that surface temperature be? Since the moon is at about the same distance from the sun as us, and we are at the right temperature to emit about as much radiation as hits us from the sun, that means that the focused moonlight would only heat things up a little above ordinary room temperature. (I've used the law that the absolute temperature only goes as the 1/4 power of the thermal radiation flux to get that even adding the focused moonlight to our ordinary radiant energy wouldn't get things very hot.)
That was fun- took some thought.
Mike W.
(published on 10/21/2011)
Follow-Up #1: flashlight burner
- Anonymous
If you were to put some frosted glass a few inches in front of your halogen bulb, diffusing its light like the sunlight bouncing off the moon, you'd find you couldn't burn paper with it either.
Mike W.
(published on 10/23/2011)
Follow-Up #2: unfocused light
- Mehran (age 61)
Miami, FL
Hi Mehran- It won't work because the light is heading all different directions so it won't focus. The product of the angular range and the spatial range stays constant as you manipulate the beam with lenses or mirrors. So you can take a spread-out beam traveling in nearly complete collimation and focus it down to a small spot, with the beam at the spot coming in from a wide range of directions. Here you start out with a wide range of directions and positions, so you're out of luck.
Mike W.
(published on 02/25/2012)
Follow-Up #3: focusing moonlight
- Kevin (age 50)
Newark, DE, USA
Mike W.
(published on 03/01/2013)
Follow-Up #4: burning paper with moonlight?
- Kevin S. (age 50)
Newark, DE, USA
The general outline of your calculation makes sense, and the relative size of the image and the lens is also consistent with optical laws. The problem is right at the end, where you accidentally switched meters and cm.
0.002W/sq.meter * 5 sq.meter= 0.01 W.
So in your 1 cm2 image, you've only got 0.01 W/cm2 or 100 W/m2. That's only around 10% of what you get from unfocussed sunlight. It won't burn the paper.
Mike W.
(published on 03/04/2013)
Follow-Up #5: fire from moonlight
- Ben (age 26)
Ohio
If the moon were a good mirror, your argument would be right. The Moon, however, is a fuzzy reflector, scrambling the directions that the light goes. As a result, it can't be focused the way a simple beam can.
Mike W.
(published on 03/18/2014)
Follow-Up #6: Does moonlight cool things?
- Keighsee (age 40)
London, ON Canada
I found an amazingly amateurish video of a guy stumbling around in the dark trying to use an infrared thermometer on a wallet. It's been debunked: . The biggest problem was that the thermometer was looking at a much bigger region than the wallet, so that any differences in its readings were just from the big temperature differences of things (rocks, pool, ...) in the vicinity.
OK, now with a smarter search, I found another. Somebody takes the temperature in two spots on a mat but doesn't do anything to show what the temperatures were without moonlight. We have no idea what's underneath the mat, etc. And another, with another crude thermometer sort of pointing at a bar or maybe off its edge,...
You've pretty much ruined my day. There seems to be a large cult of people who use digital infrared thermometers, trusting fully that these complicated devices work just as modern physics say they should, who think that incredibly sloppy experiments with them disprove the entire basis of modern physics! They record this garbage with their iphones and post it via computers on the Web, with no sense of irony. Even if the people posting the videos are all hoaxers, they seem to have true-believer followers. Their belief that the moon landings were faked is by far the least crazy of their ideas. With all their toys, these flat-earthers (not a metaphor, that's who they are) are hundreds of years behind Aristarchus (~250 BC) in understanding our world. He just had his eyes, but they were enough.
Mike W.
p.s. Just to try to get the creepy feeling out of my head, let me describe an experiment by which one might mistakenly conclude that exposure to the moon cooled things. Things cool at night via infrared radiation heading out into cool space. Take a big parabolic reflector with a thermometer at the focus. Point it at a more or less empty part of the sky. The temperature will drop via that infrared cooling. Point it at the moon. It'll still drop, but not quite as much because a little light is coming back from the moon. Now point it at a cloud or tree. It won't drop as much because there's pretty much infrared light coming back. (That's why the ground cools more on a clear cloud-free night.) If you just compared the times when a cloud was in front and when the reflector "saw" the moon, you could think that the moonlight cooled the thermometer. Actually, it's the cloud that helps keep it warm.
(published on 12/31/2015)
Follow-Up #7: starting fire with moonlight
- Mehran (age 65)
Arlington Heights, IL
Sure, you could also put the current from a huge array of photocells into a standard voltage converter (chopper plus transformer) and make a high voltage version to drive a standard heater. The questions were not about that, though, but about using big magnifying glasses.
Every now and then we pick a question that seems of general interest and put it into a batch that are randomly recycled by the server.
Mike W.
(published on 02/05/2016)
Follow-Up #8: cool moonlight?
- john (age 65)
omaha, ne
I'm not sure I follow your point. Certainly moonlight has energy and it thus warms things up when it's absorbed. Perhaps I got too complicated in trying to imagine experiments where an honest person could fool themselves into thinking that moonlight cooled things. It doesn't.
Mike W.
(published on 03/29/2016)
Follow-Up #9: focussing scattered light?
- Blaz (age 36)
You could always pick a subset of the light scattered off the moon that happens to be nearly collimated, and then focus that nearly collimated beam. The point is that since the light is scattered over a broad range of angles, the collimated light is just a fraction of the initial light. Better collimation means picking a smaller fraction. So that limits the brightness of the focussed spot.
Mike W.
(published on 06/05/2016)
Follow-Up #10: what can science know?
- Erich (age 27)
Tartu, Estonia
It's odd that you think that I'm pushing the view that science knows all the answers. This site has many answers that amount to either "we don't know" or even "nobody knows". Whenever possible, we try to give ideas for home experiments, including in some of the answers above.
We refuse, however, to take the extreme position that science knows nothing at all. Some things are known. Whether focused moonlight can start fires in ordinary materials or freeze anything at all are two of those things. Still, it's a great idea for people to try the experiments themselves. Anyone trying experiments should try to do them with at least a little care, unlike the extremely sloppy videos from Flat Earthers.
Mike W.
p.s. When I find my old copy of Lewis and Randall's text on chemical thermodynamics I'll include a much more eloquent quote on the philosophy.
Aha- I couldn't find the book but did find the line: "Let this book be dedicated to the chemists of the newer generation, who will not wish to reject all inference from conjecture or surmise, but who will not care to speculate concerning that which may be surely known."
(published on 07/18/2016)
Follow-Up #11: temperature of focussed moonlight
- Darren (age 36)
Cambridge, UK
The fundamental issue is not one of optics, and certainly not one involving details of lens design. It's a question of thermodynamics.
Take some light from the Sun, e.g. the light in a region of a cubic km. It's got some energy and some entropy. The maximum compression of that light to a small region will of course conserve the amount of energy and, by the second law of thermodynamics, not decrease the entropy. If your device is any sort of lens or mirror, then the spectrum of frequencies and hence the number of photons won't change. So it's just a question of how much you can focus the energy without the reduction of volume decreasing the net entropy of those photons. The reason you can do a good job of focusing is that the light initially has a very narrow range of directions. A good lens system will trade the increase of entropy from an increase in the directional spread for a decrease from reducing the spatial spread. The focused light can be much more dense, close to the temperature of the Sun's surface.
If you take the same sunlight and let it bounce off the surface of the Moon, the directions it's traveling in get all scrambled up, no longer confined to a narrow range. The entropy of the light increases a lot. The focused light that you could have gotten before has less entropy than this scattered light, so the Second Law of Thermodynamics (entropy never decreases) says that you can't get to that state unless you use some active device that's making entropy somewhere else. But if you had a device like that (e.g. a match) you wouldn't need the moonlight.
Why was the point about not changing the photon spectrum important? As one of our readers pointed out, a device like a photovoltaic cell can convert the energy to forms that are intrinsically higher-entropy (e.g. thermal jiggling of electrons and atoms in a wire) and use that to get a small region very hot without decreasing net entropy. As long as you're just steering the photons around, however, thermodynamics says you won't get them concentrated enough to start a fire,
Mike W.
(published on 05/28/2017)