planets don't produce their own light. They just reflect light
No.
Luminous means giving off light, and satellites don't do that. There's no one up there to see them so there's no point in wasting energy on lights.
They can reflect sunlight though.
Yes it does.
Most stars turn hydrogen into helium using heat (produced originally by gravitational contraction) at the core of the star.
This produces light and heat.
Most satellites reflect light, they do not emit it. They reflect sunlight.
no
nope
they produce protons and electrons they are collition then the light produce and heat produce
No. Bells do not produce light.
light energy
A firecracker uses chemical energy to produce the light and sound.
Light is produced it does not produce. It is produced by the excitement of subatomic particles called photons and propagated by radiation
satellites produce energy by the sun
Satellites carry cameras (visible light, infrared and ultraviolet)and radar. They produce very good images of the earth that can be studied.
Solar panels must be constantly exposed to light to produce electricity
Solar panels must be constantly exposed to light to produce electricity
Geographers use satellites to study the Earth by collecting data on land use, vegetation cover, urbanization, climate patterns, and natural disasters. Satellites provide a global perspective and consistent data over time, allowing geographers to analyze and monitor changes on the Earth's surface at different scales. Geographic information obtained from satellites is used for mapping, spatial analysis, and understanding the dynamics of the Earth's systems.
light emitted by the satellites
it is so because in outer space , there is no light due to vacuum and so as to track satellites from earth , they reflect light.
Stars.
When they reflect the light from the sun or moon.
they produce protons and electrons they are collition then the light produce and heat produce
does fire produce light
An atomic explosion will emit all types of energy including all kinds light, heat and radiation as well as a large cloud of debri. The light is bright enough to be seen from space. So is the heat (as infrared) radiation when viewed through appropriate equipment. No other ground activity can generate that amount of light and heat so the answer is yes, it does produce a unmistakable light flash characteristic of such events and detectable by satellites?