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Old 07-31-2020, 04:50 PM
froze froze is offline
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Join Date: Feb 2004
Location: Fort Wayne, Indiana
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Quote:
Originally Posted by jemoryl View Post
actually dave, the sky is not blue to the emittance of gasses but due to rayleigh (elastic) scattering of photons by molecules in the atmosphere. Rayleigh scattering depends on the inverse fourth power of the wavelength - a very strong dependence. Sunlight covers the range of wavelengths in the visible spectrum, from short wavelengths at the violet-blue end to long wavelengths at the red end. The violet-blue-green photons are more strongly scattered than those at the red-orange-yellow end, so the sky appears to be blueish.

The photons are never really absorbed by the molecules, so they are not 'emitted'. Elastic scattering means the wavelength of the light is not changed in the scattering process.
huh????

By the way, I heard it from scientists that the reason the sky appears blue is due the fact that the Earth is mostly water and the sunlight reflects that back into the atmosphere, which why Mars atmosphere is red because they have no water and the dirt is red.

Last edited by froze; 07-31-2020 at 04:52 PM.
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