infared radiation
No, it reflects the light from the sun onto the Earth.
After the earth absorbs the visible light from the sun the earth re-emits the infrared emissions as the type of the electromagnetic waves.
It reflects light. The only body in our solar system that emits light is the sun. The Earth also emits light from fires, volcanic eruptions and electric lighting but not enough to illuminate something as large as another planet.
The Sun. And also: when electrons go from excited state back to ground level, the energy that they had transforms into light which is given off.
The Sun does this, of course.
When an electron returns to its ground state it emits energy in the form of light.
The Earth does not emit light, it like the moon reflects light
No, it reflects the light from the sun onto the Earth.
After the earth absorbs the visible light from the sun the earth re-emits the infrared emissions as the type of the electromagnetic waves.
Because it emits a beam of light - which is detected by a special membrane on the computer screen.
The Earth's external heat engine is the Sun. It constantly emits light, heat, and energy which are absorbed by the Earth.
It reflects light. The only body in our solar system that emits light is the sun. The Earth also emits light from fires, volcanic eruptions and electric lighting but not enough to illuminate something as large as another planet.
pulsar
Yes, that is correct.
The Sun. And also: when electrons go from excited state back to ground level, the energy that they had transforms into light which is given off.
pulsar
Only the sun emits radiation in the wavelengths of visible light, which is considerably higher energy than infrared emitted by Earth.