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jleader
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05-01-2003 02:49 PM ET (US)
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Yeah, chico, I suspect that they're less likely to install ugly lights in upscale neighborhoods, because people with clout will complain. I thought I heard somewhere that San Diego was switching to 100% sodium vapor streetlights to minimize the light pollution at Palomar, though.
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chico haas
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04-30-2003 10:14 PM ET (US)
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Thanks for the explanation. LA probably used them to conserve power, but maybe, in some places, to assert it.
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jleader
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04-30-2003 04:03 PM ET (US)
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Chico, I think those yellow lights are sodium-vapor lights. They're used for street lighting where: you want to conserve power (they're relatively efficient); you don't care about pure white light and perfect color rendition; or you don't want to interfere with nearby astronomical observatories (obviously not relevant in LA, Griffith Park and Mt. Wilson notwithstanding).
After an optics lab session about holography many years ago, I also found out that they can be used for viewing holograms, because the energy is mostly at a single wavelength.
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Technophobe
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04-30-2003 03:25 PM ET (US)
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This is old stuff. I remember seeing photographs from another photographer, whose name escapes me, who took the photos at night and used a bunch of stobes to highlight objects, including moving ones. I believed these were referred to as "power photos" or something like that. Must have been 15 or 20 years ago, at least.
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chico haas
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04-30-2003 01:08 PM ET (US)
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After a couple of riots in South Central LA, the city installed yellowish 'riot lights' in naughty neighborhoods. They cast a sickly orange glow like sunlight filtered through smoke from a forest fire. Unlike the cold, white cleaniliness of ballpark lights, these just said welcome to losertown.
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