It can cause sunburn, so it is yes for both answers. Light at the end of the spectrum,blue but invisible
the sunlight interacts with the earths atmosphere and makes the sky blue
our atmosphere scatters blue light.
Yes and no. Our atmosphere is part of the earth, and when you see the blue sky you are actually seeing the light scattered by the atmosphere. Of course if you think of the sky as going all the way to the distant stars, then you are no longer talking about the earth's atmosphere.
The blue sky we see from the earth is due to blue light diffusion by the Earth's atmosphere. However since the moon does not have an atmosphere there is no light diffusion.
The atmosphere scatters blue light more than yellow light.
The fact that nitrogen (79% of earths atmosphere) reflects and scatters blue light.
Yes, Ultraviolet is a blue/purple type of light that is florescent.
Earth's Atmosphere was named ''Blue Sky'' Because the atmosphere is Blue.
According to the website below, they are blue because blue is the closest wavelength of the visible spectrum to ultraviolet light, and insects are attracted to ultraviolet light.
The blue light has longer wavelength, lower frequency, andless energy per photon than the ultraviolet light has.The blue light is also visible to the human eyes, whereas theultraviolet light is not.
Blue.
the sunlight interacts with the earths atmosphere and makes the sky blue
our atmosphere scatters blue light.
the sun lets off a blue light
Ultraviolet It need visible light. Red and blue light are more preferred.
infrared light:)
Yes and no. Our atmosphere is part of the earth, and when you see the blue sky you are actually seeing the light scattered by the atmosphere. Of course if you think of the sky as going all the way to the distant stars, then you are no longer talking about the earth's atmosphere.