How far can I see on a clear day? - Big Questions (Ep. 18)
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Apr 3, 2025
A weekly show where we endeavor to answer one of your big questions. This week, Brian Currie asks, "On a clear day, how many miles can I see in every direction? How about on a hazy day?"
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Hi, I'm Craig and I have eyes like a hawk with human eyes
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And this is Mentalfloss on YouTube. Today I'm going to answer Brian Curry's big question
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On a clear day, how many miles can I see in every direction? How about on a hazy day
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Well, Brian, the answer to your question really depends on circumstances. Like some nights you can look up with the sky and see the Andromeda Galaxy
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which is a full 2.5 million light years away. But you probably want more information than that
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So that's what you're going to get. Maybe you don't want more, but we like to talk about stuff at you
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So we're going to do that. Let's get started. According to a study done in 1942, the human eye can actually see a single flame burning 30 miles away
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That's around 50 kilometers, but that could only happen if the Earth were flat
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You're a thing flat. We can actually see much further than we do see. It's that darn horizon that gets in the way
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The horizon, by the way, is where the Earth meets the sky. You've heard of it. You've seen it
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On Instagram. Since that's the case, you've probably already figured out that the altitude has an impact on how far you can see
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So, if you're an average height of 5 foot 7 inches and standing on the ground, the horizon is approximately 2.9 miles away
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So people can see 2 miles away boom done No unfortunately it not that simple Humans can come up with a simple formula that works for every situation and that because we have things like atmospheric refraction which is how light passes through
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different mediums in different ways. Thanks to that, things like air pressure and temperature are actually affecting the way you see the horizon
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Also that big guy at the top of the Sears Tower when you're trying to look out the window, but you just won't get out of the way
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You pay 20 bucks to get up there. Then of course, as Brian so astutely mentioned, there are factors like haziness and fog
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If you wanted to see really far, you could hop on a plane or climb Mount Everest, but then you would probably be
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have a cloud get in your way. All of that said, Dr. Andrew T. Young
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Mr. T, of San Diego State University, has developed this formula that takes
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refraction into consideration. All you got to do is insert your eye level in feet
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and it will give you an approximation of your distance to the horizon in miles. But
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like I said, no formula you find for this will be perfect. There are just too many variables. If all this confusing refraction stuff is too much for you, you can just
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calculate how many miles there are between you and the horizon. There's a link in the doodoo to an online calculator that will doobly do the work for you
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PUNS. Thanks for watching Mental Floss on YouTube made by these lovely people
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If you have a question of your own, leave it in the comments. See you next week from an average distance
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