the ionosphere.
ionosphere
No, it does not. Ozone only reflects UV rays.
This layer contains the ionosphere, which causes the northern lights and the reflection of radio waves. APEX
The ionosphere bends radio waves . . . most go out into space, but a fair number hit the earth far away, and are reflected back up to the ionosphere. Radio operators call this phenomenon, "The skip".
The ozone layer helps to guard against the harmful UV radiations from the sun. These are very high frequency waves.
1) Any object that emits radiation (because of its temperature) will emit in all wavelengths, including visible light, infrared, radio waves, ultra-violet, etc.What changes is the proportion of each (which depends directly on the temperature).2) The Earth's atmosphere is transparent to radio waves (meaning: it is easy to receive radio waves from space -- in general they are not blocked by the atmosphere).3) It is easy to build a receiver that gives us the direction from which the radio waves are coming. We can draw maps of radio sources (the same way that taking pictures in visible light lets us draw maps of the visible stars).
Lonosphere
Ionosphere
the lonosphere
The ozone layer contains electrical charged particles that reflects radio waves
The "F" layer is high altitude region of ionized atoms that reflects radio waves.
the lonosphere
It's not radio active waves; it's just radio waves. It's called the Ionosphere and depending on what layer of the Ionosphere it changes how far you can talk
The ozone layer contains electrical charged particles that reflects radio waves
If you are talking about short waves then the ionosphere.
No, it does not. Ozone only reflects UV rays.
The ionosphere contains weakly ionized gas which reflects radio waves.
The Ionosphere reflects longer radio waves back to Earth. It varies in height going up at night giving the waves a long distance bounce.Flat vertical walls. Better refraction will Non-ferous metals. Horizontal plan will distort the image of the wave.\ CIV