All of them.
Chile
At present, Australia is said to receive high levels of ultraviolet radiation.
well think =]
i take it you go to stretford grammar ;P
The Earth itself does not emit ultraviolet radiation. Ultraviolet radiation primarily comes from the sun, which emits different wavelengths of light including ultraviolet radiation. When the Earth is exposed to sunlight, it can absorb and reflect this ultraviolet radiation.
The ozone layer in Earth's stratosphere mostly blocks ultraviolet radiation from entering the surface. It absorbs the majority of harmful UVB and UVC radiation, allowing only UVA and some UVB radiation to reach the surface.
Electromagnetic radiation from the sun, most in the form of visible light.
The four types of radiation from the sun are visible light, ultraviolet (UV) radiation, infrared radiation, and radio waves. These types of radiation are emitted by the sun and travel through space to reach Earth. Each type of radiation has different properties and impacts on the Earth's environment.
Ultraviolet radiation has greater energy than infrared radiation. Ultraviolet radiation has shorter wavelengths and higher frequencies, while infrared radiation has longer wavelengths and lower frequencies.
No, it is a type of electromagnetic radiation, which ultraviolet is part of as well.
No, ultraviolet radiation is not emitted by the Earth itself. Ultraviolet radiation comes from the sun and is a form of electromagnetic radiation with shorter wavelengths than visible light. Earth's atmosphere filters and absorbs some of the incoming ultraviolet radiation before it reaches the surface.
Not as ultraviolet; the radiation is emitted as infrared radiation.