Science, asked by geetusatya79, 11 months ago

during cloudy weather of no moon night why sky is milky light​

Answers

Answered by manghatlakshmi
0

Answer: One evening several years ago, I took this picture of the misty glow of an almost full moon shining between pine trees in my backyard. The moon was beautifully illuminated and dominated the dark sky. Yet something was disturbing about the atmospheric night scene: the illumination of the moon seemed to be coming from the wrong direction! In this photograph of a waxing moon in the southern sky, its illumination appears to be coming from above to the right. But the sun---which had set an hour earlier---was already below the western horizon to the right when this photo was taken. If the sun is below the horizon, I thought, shouldn't its illumination of the moon appear to be coming from below the horizon? Intrigued, I made further observations when both the sun and the moon occupied the evening sky at the same time, and it certainly seemed that light rays from the sun would have to follow a curved path to shine on the moon at the observed angle.

Answered by UsmanSant
0

During cloudy weather of no moon night the sky is milky light because:

● Usually the colour of sky is based on the light transmitted by moon.

● But on a no moon night the sky appears milky do it is cloudy because clouds absorb light present on the earth atmosphere and observed frequencies of light it in the atmosphere. The light is majorly from the street lights present on the surface of the earth.

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