Haze

Haze is traditionally an atmospheric phenomenon where dust, smoke and other dry particles obscure the clarity of the sky. The World Meteorological Organization manual of codes includes a classification of horizontal obscuration into categories of fog, ice fog, steam fog, mist, haze, smoke, volcanic ash, dust, sand and snow. Sources for haze particles include farming (ploughing in dry weather), traffic, industry, and wildfires.

Seen from afar (e.g. approaching airplane) and depending upon the direction of view with respect to the sun, haze may appear brownish or bluish, while mist tends to be bluish-grey. Whereas haze often is thought of as a phenomenon of dry air, mist formation is a phenomenon of humid air. However, haze particles may act as condensation nuclei for the subsequent formation of mist droplets; such forms of haze are known as "wet haze."

The term "haze", in meteorological literature, generally is used to denote visibility-reducing aerosols of the wet type. Such aerosols commonly arise from complex chemical reactions that occur as sulfur dioxide gases emitted during combustion are converted into small droplets of sulphuric acid. The reactions are enhanced in the presence of sunlight, high relative humidity, and stagnant air flow. A small component of wet haze aerosols appear to be derived from compounds released by trees, such as terpenes. For all these reasons, wet haze tends to be primarily a warm-season phenomenon. Large areas of haze covering many thousands of kilometers may be produced under favorable conditions each summer.

Haze (disambiguation)

Haze may refer to:

  • Haze, atmospheric condition
  • Haze machine, device used in the entertainment industry to simulate the atmospheric condition
  • Turbidity (or haze), the cloudiness of a fluid or transparent solids, such as glass or plastic, as measured by the percentage of light that is deflected or attenuated
  • Visual appearance (optics, visual perception), scattering of light out of the regular direction during reflection or transmission
  • Corneal opacification (known as haze), central corneal opacification is a diagnostic "danger sign" in red eye (medicine)
  • Hazing, a practice of harassment and initiation
  • Haze may also refer to:

    In films

  • Haze (2005 film), a 2005 Japanese thriller film written and directed by Shinya Tsukamoto
  • Haze (2010 film), a 2010 Turkish film
  • In gaming

  • Haze (video game), PlayStation 3 video game developed by Free Radical Design
  • In music

  • Haze (band), progressive rock band
  • "Haze" (song), song by nu-metal band Korn for the video game, Haze
  • In literature

  • Dolores Haze is the character after whose nickname Vladimir Nabokov's novel Lolita is named.
  • Haze (2005 film)

    Haze (HAZE ヘイズ) is a 2005 Japanese thriller/horror film written and directed by Shinya Tsukamoto who also stars in the movie. After appearances at several international festivals in 2005, the film debuted theatrically in Japan on March 4, 2006. Two versions of the film exist: the original release, a short 25 minute version; and what Director Tsukamoto entitled the "Long Version", which runs 49 minutes.

    Plot synopsis

    A man wakes up in a small concrete space bleeding from the abdomen. He can barely move and has no recollection of why or how he came to be there. Crawling forward he eventually meets a woman and they try to piece together their past lives.

    Cast

  • Shinya Tsukamoto
  • Kaori Fujii (藤井かほり)
  • Takahiro Murase (村瀬貴洋)
  • Takahiro Kandaka (神高貴宏)
  • Masato Tsujioka
  • Mao Saito (さいとう真央)
  • Film Festivals

    Listed chronologically:

  • Jeonju International Film Festival (April 28, 2005)
  • New York Film Festival (October 1, 2005)
  • Lyon Asiexpo Film Festival (November 12, 2005)
  • FilmAsia Festival (December 3, 2005, www.filmasia.cz)
  • Sueño

    Art

  • El sueño (fr), original Spanish name of "The Dream" a painting by Francisco de Goya 1790
  • El sueño, original Spanish name of "The Dream" a painting by Salvador Dalí 1937
  • El sueño (es), a sculpture installation of a steam train on a disused viaduct by Juan José Barragán alongside Carretera Nacional 420
  • Film and TV

  • Sueños, 2003 short film Daniel Guzmán (director) with Adam Jezierski
  • Sueño (film), English-language American comedy film 2005
  • Sueños (TV series) Guillermo Dávila
  • Sueños (show) Sara Baras
  • Music

    Classical compositions

  • Sueño, guitar piece by Francisco Tárrega
  • Sueño, for 2 guitars and percussion by Jaime Zenamon (b.1953) Zenamon
  • Albums

  • Sueños (Los Yonic's album)
  • Sueños (Yolandita Monge album)
  • Sueños (Intocable album), by Intocable (band), nominated for Premio Lo Nuestro 2003
  • Sueños EP, first album by Spanish rock group Danza Invisible 1982 es:Sueños (álbum)
  • Sueños, album by Yalo Cuéllar 2000 es:Sueños (álbum de Yalo Cuéllar)
  • Songs

  • "Sueño", song by Bino (singer), R. Figueroa
  • "Sueño", song by Los Brujos Spain 1992
  • Sueños (album)

    Sueños (Eng.: Dreams) is the title of a studio album released by norteño music band Intocable. This album became their first number-one set on the Billboard Top Latin Albums chart for 4 weeks and received a nomination for a Grammy Award for Best Mexican/Mexican-American Album.

    Track listing

    The track listing from Billboard.com

  • Sueña (Luis Padilla) — 4:16
  • Vuelve (Luis Padilla) — 3:48
  • Te Sigo Amando (Aarón "La Pantera" Martínez) — 3:33
  • Jamás Te Dije (Josué Contreras) — 3:38
  • Muy a Tu Manera (Ricky Muñoz/Josué Contreras) — 2:59
  • Alguien Como Tú (Oswaldo Villarreal) — 3:40
  • Desolación (Luis Padilla) — 3:43
  • Mas Débil Que Tú (Luis Padilla) — 4:03
  • El Poder de Tus Manos (Luis Padilla) — 3:03
  • Si Te Vas (Marco Antonio Pérez) — 4:23
  • ¿En Qué Fallamos? (Oscar Treviño) — 3:09
  • Nada Es Igual (Eduardo Alanis) — 3:32
  • Voy a Extrañarte (Josué Contreras) — 4:07
  • Más Que un Sueño (José Roberto Martínez) — 2:52
  • Cómo Te Extraño! (Miguel Mendoza) — 3:13
  • Credits

    The information form Allmusic.

  • Ricky Muñoz: Accordion, vocals, producer
  • Intocable

    Intocable (Untouchable) is a Tejano/Norteño musical group from Zapata, Texas that was started by friends Ricky Muñoz and René Martínez in the early 1990s. In a few years, Intocable rose to the top of the Tejano and Norteño fields with a musical signature that fused Tejano's robust conjunto and Norteño folk rhythms with a pop balladry. Intocable is perhaps the most influential group in Tejano and their tough Tejano/Norteño fusion has become the blueprint for dozens of Tex-Mex groups. The group's style, which combines romantic, hooky melodies, tight instrumentation and vocal harmony, is consistently imitated by other Tejano and Norteño groups, including Imán, Duelo, Costumbre, Solido, Estruendo, Intenso, and Zinzero.

    Career accomplishments include four consecutive sold-out nights at Mexico City's prestigious Auditorio Nacional and the group's 2003 headlining appearance at Reliant Stadium in Houston, which drew a record 70,104 fans. They also played two sold-out dates at the 10,000-capacity Monterrey Arena in Monterrey, Mexico—an unusual accomplishment given that Norteño groups typically play large dance halls and rarely arenas unless it's an all day festival event. Intocable has also won at least eight of Univision's Premio Lo Nuestro awards. They received their first Grammy win in February 2005 at the 47th Annual Grammys (Grammy Award for Best Mexican/Mexican-American Album; Intimamente) and second at the 53rd annual Grammys for their album Classic.

    Podcasts:

    PLAYLIST TIME:

    2's + 3's

    by: New Found Glory

    I sat and stared at the sky.
    I knew I'd find myself there again.
    I wonder how else to cope with the air.
    The air that brings me this luck.
    I'm unlucky, that's just me
    Seems what used to be has changed.
    And I feel it coming again
    I feel it coming with the wind
    I feel it coming again
    I feel it breaking with the wind
    And I know, I won't feel it again if I just played along.
    "Stupid games are for stupid people" and they end just like a song.
    A song with no beginning, a song that has no meaning.
    Just like this one, just like this one...
    I sat and stared at the sky.
    I knew I'd find myself there again.
    I wonder how else to cope with the air.
    And I feel it coming again
    I feel it coming with the wind
    I feel it coming again
    I feel it breaking with the wind
    And I know, I won't feel it again if I just played along.
    "Stupid games are for stupid people" and they end just like a song.
    A song with no beginning, a song that has no meaning.




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