Afterglow
In meteorology, an afterglow is an optical phenomenon, generally referring to a broad arch of whitish or pinkish sunlight in the twilight sky after sunset, consisting of purple light and bright segment. It consists of several atmospheric optical phenomena. The purple light mainly occurs when the Sun is 2–6° below the horizon, during civil twilight, while the bright segment lasts until the end of the nautical twilight. Similarly, a foreglow is a broad arch of whitish or pinkish sunlight in the twilight sky before sunrise, consisting of purple light and bright segment.
Afterglow is often seen in volcanic eruptions, in which the purple light might also be called volcanic purple light. In volcanic occurrences specifically, the light is scattered by fine particulates, like dust, suspended in the atmosphere. Afterglow may refer to the golden-red glowing light from the sunset and sunrise reflected in the sky in alpenglow and in particularly for its last stage, when the purple light is reflected.
During golden hour, sunlight reaches Earth intensely in its low-energy and low-frequency red component. During a period of civil twilight, the red sunlight remains visible by scattering through particles in the air. Backscattering, possibly after being reflected off clouds or high snowfields in mountain regions, furthermore creates a reddish to pinkish light. On top of that, the high-energy and high-frequency components of light towards blue are scattered out broadly, producing the broader blue light of nautical twilight before or after the reddish light of civil twilight, while in combination with the reddish light producing the purple light. This period of blue dominating is referred to as the blue hour and is, like the golden hour, widely treasured by photographers and painters.