yes
When our skin get exposure to sun our skin darken. And skin darkening due to sun rays is known as tanning. Tanning is cause due acceleration in melanin.
No, third-degree burns are typically caused by contact with hot liquids, flames, or chemicals. The sun can cause first and second-degree burns, but not third-degree burns, as it does not produce temperatures high enough to cause that level of burn.
Burns can come from anything hot. Microwaves, the sun, (sometimes the refrigerator,) a TV, computer, or handheld game that was turned on for a long time, active volcanoes, lava, fire, friction, steam, hot water, etc., can cause burns. Or cold. Burns are caused by rapid changes in temperature
UV rays transfer energy into the dead particles into your hair, lightening it, and since your skin isn't dead, it will darken it.
Yes. Repeated sun burns can cause sun poisoning. It can destroy your skin just like a severe burn. It made it painful for one man to go out into the sunshine. It can lead to skin cancer.
It burns the top layer of your skin and sometimes in extreme cases can cause skin cancer
The sun burns small amounts of helium and when combined with oxygen, the helium makes neon. The sun burns mostly hydrogen.
Right here on earth! What do you think a "sun burn" is?
The sun
when the sun burns, it heats up it sorroundings, that how we get heat, its energy hit earths layers.
Yes, the sun sets in the evening as the Earth rotates and the sun moves below the horizon, causing the sky to darken.
the sun but it burns you after a while