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Sea Life in Cracked Rock, Ultraviolet Light, Des Moines, Washington

Sea life growing on a cracked rock exposed at low tide glows when exposed to ultraviolet light at the edge of Puget Sound in Des Moines, Washington. The glow is the result of phosphors that convert ultraviolet radiation, which is invisible to human eyes, into wavelengths that are visible. This scene was captured under black light.

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Filename
BlackLight_Low-Tide_Cracked-Rock_Des-Moines_2068.jpg
Copyright
Copyright 2023 Kevin Ebi/LivingWilderness.com. All rights reserved.
Image Size
8192x5464 / 28.0MB
ultraviolet ultraviolet light blacklight black light fluoresce phosphor phosphors low tide tide beach rock Puget Sound Des Moines Washington WA nature psychedelic red
Contained in galleries
Sea life growing on a cracked rock exposed at low tide glows when exposed to ultraviolet light at the edge of Puget Sound in Des Moines, Washington. The glow is the result of phosphors that convert ultraviolet radiation, which is invisible to human eyes, into wavelengths that are visible. This scene was captured under black light.
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