Math, asked by vikasgill53, 11 months ago

answer this question​

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Answered by Anonymous
1

Step-by-step explanation:

This is because the sun simply outputs more power than our eye is designed to handle, and exposing our eye to that kind of power can damage the retina. And in a nutshell, solar eclipses are dangerous because the sun can come out from behind the moon and "surprise you" before you have a chance to look away.

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During a solar eclipse however, the opportunity to look for prolonged periods at the event presents itself as a reason why you overcome the urge to look away. The dimming of the normal brightness also aids and leaves you unprepared when the suns disc emerges again … sudden increases in brightness can also occur due to the irregular surface of the moons valleys and mountains at the edge of its shadow. This unpredictability is highest when the sun just emerges from the moons shadow after a total eclipse, which is also the time when your iris is wide open taking in the dimmed light showing a spectacular corona which you are looking at continually. Unless you have continuous eye protection the chances are unacceptably high that you will damage your retina.

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Answered by gajendrakumarjha
0

Answer:

because it is dangerous

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