Ultraviolet light.
Most of Earth's incoming ultraviolet radiation is absorbed by the ozone layer in the stratosphere. The ozone layer acts as a shield, protecting living organisms from the harmful effects of UV radiation, such as skin cancer and cataracts.
Nitrogen, Oxygen (UV-C and more energetic), and Ozone (UV-B and more energetic)
The atmosphere and especially the ozone layer
Over 95 percent of incoming ultraviolet radiation is absorbed by the ozone layer in the stratosphere of the Earth's atmosphere. This absorption helps protect life on Earth by preventing most harmful UV radiation from reaching the surface.
Most of the radiation absorbed in Earth's atmosphere is absorbed in the ozone layer, which is a region of the stratosphere that contains a high concentration of ozone molecules. Ozone absorbs ultraviolet radiation from the sun, protecting life on Earth from its harmful effects.
which layer contains most of earths ozone
Ozone layer is most affected. It is a pool of ozone molecules.
the greenhouse
Most of it is absorbed. UV is the harmful radiation of the sun.
Most of the UV from sun is absorbed by ozone. It acts as a shield for earth.
Most ultraviolet radiation is absorbed by the ozone layer in the Earth's stratosphere. This layer of ozone helps to protect life on Earth by absorbing and filtering out much of the harmful ultraviolet radiation from the sun before it reaches the surface.
Most visible light is bounced back into space, while some of it is absorbed into the atmosphere.