Science, asked by kumark96023, 1 month ago

why does the sun appear reddish at sunrise​

Answers

Answered by Anonymous
0

Answer:

The light from the Sun travels through Earth's atmosphere it undergoes scattering before it reaches us. ... Thus, there is more probability for shorter wavelength light to get more scattered than for the longer wavelength light. Hence, the Sun (and sunrise and sunset) appears reddish orange during sunset and sunrise.

Explanation:

During sunrise, the light rays coming from the Sun have to travel a greater distance in the earth's atmosphere before reaching our eyes. In this journey, the shorter wavelengths of lights are scattered out and only longer wavelengths are able to reach our eyes. ... Therefore, the Sun appears reddish early in the morning.

But at the time of sunrise or sunset, the light rays have to travel a longer distance through atmosphere due to which most of the blue light gets scattered away before reaching our eyes and the red light having longer wavelength remains unaffected and passes through the atmosphere to reach our eyes hence making the sky ...

Answered by yamin1971mya
1

Answer:

⫷❥AN SWER⫸⋆⤴️⤵️

Explanation:

The light from the Sun travels through Earth's atmosphere it undergoes scattering before it reaches us. ... Thus, there is more probability for shorter wavelength light to get more scattered than for the longer wavelength light. Hence, the Sun (and sunrise and sunset) appears reddish orange during sunset and sunrise.

☺️☺️

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