The sunlight will be absorbed by the surface.If the surface is a mirror,lesser light will be absorbed.More will be reflected. If the surface is black,more light will be absorbed.
Sunlight that hits the Earth's surface is absorbed by the Earth. It is then reflected back.
The pie graph gets warm when the sunlight hits it.
The more acute the angle at which the sunlight strikes, the more atmosphere that sunlight must pass through. Passing through more atmosphere will weaken and dim the light beams. As the angle at which sunlight hits the earth changes, the same amount of sunlight is spread over different areas, so that near the poles each area of surface receives less intense radiation than an equivalent area near the poles.
Yes it does. When the sunlight is direct, it specifically hits a location so more solar energy is packed into that area. Therefore, it is warmer in that area. For example, the equator.
the sunlight hits it directly.
Sunlight that hits the Earth's surface is absorbed by the Earth. It is then reflected back.
The sunlight will be absorbed by the surface.If the surface is a mirror,lesser light will be absorbed.More will be reflected. If the surface is black,more light will be absorbed.
It gets absorbed by the surface, reflected, and even radiated back as infrared rays where it is absorbed by the greenhouse gases in the atmosphere.
i belive so
when light hits a rough surface it scattters.
It bounces back.
The pie graph gets warm when the sunlight hits it.
nien
There are two general possibilities - depending upon several types of conditions -, it will be either reflected or absorbed.
im assuming that u meant "what happens when LIGHT hits a black surface?" the reason for this is that the black surface ABSORBS the light, and so none of the light waves can be reflected back (which is what makes it look black)
a direct ray is where the sun light hits the earth at a 90 degree angle so the angle of sunlight is perpendicular to the earths surface
solar energy changes adp into atp.