why
Roughly 30% of the sun's energy is scattered or reflected back into space primarily due to interactions with the Earth's atmosphere, clouds, and surface. This loss of solar energy occurs through processes like Rayleigh scattering, absorption, and reflection.
What happens to Solar Energy is that some of it gets absorbed into air, land and water while the rest gets reflected back to space.
The Sun's radiation reflects back into space due to the Earth's atmosphere and surface properties. Some of the incoming solar energy is absorbed by the Earth, while a portion is scattered or reflected by clouds, aerosols, and surfaces like ice and water. This reflection, known as albedo, helps regulate the Earth's climate by preventing all solar energy from being absorbed, thus maintaining a balance in the planet's temperature.
The vast majority of the Sun's energy escapes into space.
The Suns rays reflect of the Earth, then off the outer shell of the atmosphere, temporarily trapping sunlight and heat.
Roughly 30% of the sun's energy is scattered or reflected back into space primarily due to interactions with the Earth's atmosphere, clouds, and surface. This loss of solar energy occurs through processes like Rayleigh scattering, absorption, and reflection.
It goes back into space.
Neither, they ARE energy.
45%
Roughly 70% of the sun's energy is absorbed by the Earth's surface. The rest is reflected back into space or absorbed by the atmosphere.
When the sun's energy hits clouds, ice, and snow, some of it is reflected back into space, some is absorbed and warms the surface, and some is scattered in different directions. The white surfaces of ice and snow reflect more sunlight, helping to cool the Earth.
Yes. Indeed one proposed solution for the global warming suffered by our planet is to increase the amount of energy reflected back into space by increasing our own oceans ability to reflect it.
What happens to Solar Energy is that some of it gets absorbed into air, land and water while the rest gets reflected back to space.
When the sun's rays strike Earth's surface, the energy is either absorbed, reflected, or scattered. This energy is essential for driving various processes on Earth, such as warming the surface, powering the water cycle, and enabling photosynthesis in plants.
absorbed
Radiation.
The Sun's radiation reflects back into space due to the Earth's atmosphere and surface properties. Some of the incoming solar energy is absorbed by the Earth, while a portion is scattered or reflected by clouds, aerosols, and surfaces like ice and water. This reflection, known as albedo, helps regulate the Earth's climate by preventing all solar energy from being absorbed, thus maintaining a balance in the planet's temperature.