Assume the Sun radiates electromagnetic radiation and solar wind particles equally in all directions.
Then the portion of its radiation that strikes the Earth (or Earth's magnetic shield) is: the cross-sectional area of the Earth divided by the surface area of the sphere centered on the Sun, at 1AU.
So, that's:
"pi" x (Earth radius)2/ 4"pi" x (Earth-Sun distance)2 = 4.62 x 10-10
That's 0.0000000462 percent of it.
That's a pretty good answer, without going into minor complications.
(Or 93.3 dB less.)
Magma that reaches earth's surface is called lava.
Magma once it reaches the earths surface is called lava.
No. the layer that actually reaches the surface is the troposphere.
LAva
69%
50%
The energy is radiated equally in all directions into a sphere with a radius of 150 million kilometres, which has a surface area. On that sphere sits the Earth with a radius of 6378 kilometres, which has a circular cross-section area which intercepts part of the total energy. The ratio of the two areas answers the question.
the greenhouse
About 50% of the sun's radiation that reaches Earth's atmosphere is absorbed by the Earth's surface. The remaining energy is either reflected back to space or absorbed by the atmosphere.
Magma that reaches the Earth's surface is known as lava.
Magma that reaches earth's surface is called lava.
meteoroid
A meteorite.
Magma once it reaches the earths surface is called lava.
That is correct. When magma travels from the mantle to the crust and reaches the surface, that is a volcano.
lava
lava