Hamradioguy
Pyrrhonist
- Joined
- Feb 6, 2005
- Messages
- 2,297
The who gave me the book-when I was maybe 10 or 11 wrote in the front, "The world is a screwy place".
I don't think this is correct for visible light. If it were, most of the visible light from the sun would not reach the ground, but would heat the atmosphere instead. I'm pretty sure that's not what happens.
The 300+ miles of atmosphere directly above you is considerably less gass than 300 miles of atmoshpere at ground level looking sideways.
Hmmm. It is said energy cannot be lost. Yet, if we were to suppose that the universe is "open"... that the light could escape into the void of space (where some people think God is)...then it be like...energy got lost?
How do you define the universe? If there's space there that light can travel to and through, then isn't it still part of the universe?Hmmm. It is said energy cannot be lost. Yet, if we were to suppose that the universe is "open"... that the light could escape into the void of space (where some people think God is)...then it be like...energy got lost?
An awful lot of the sunlight does get scattered, especially in the shorter wavelengths. This is why the sky is blue -- Rayleigh scattering of photons off of oxygen and nitrogen molecules. Longer wavelengths, into the red, are scattered by larger bits of dust and particulates. All in visible wavelengths. This isn't absorption, which is a different process.
I don't have the numbers (it's been 10 years since my last radiative transfer class), but I suspect the intensity of the visible sunlight is considerably less at the surface of the earth than at the top of the atmosphere.
If I shine a flashlight up into the night sky, where does the light go?
I am guessing that it will keep going forever, but will become diffused since it will spread out from the source in a conical shape.
Is this correct?
The inverse square law of light propagation alone would greatly effect a flashlight beam over a 300 mile span than it would sunlight over the same interval. The flashlight beam would be extremely reduced by the time it reached 300 miles, but sunlight would be far less affected.
The sunlight reaching the earth's surface is about 800 to 1000 watts per square meter per second, depending on location and other factors. Above the earth's atmosphere it is about 1370 watts per square meter per second.
Suppose there were no atmosphere at all and we are 300 miles above the earth.
If we sent a beam from the flashlight to the earth below, the inverse square law alone would reduce it to near invisibility at 300 miles,
Inverse square law has absolutely nothing to do with it. We aren't talking about how diffuse the light will get, but whether or not it travels off into the deep vacuum of space. The inverse square law has to do with how the same amount of light gets spread over more and more area, and it's certainly relevant to how bright the flashlight will look to any given observer. But the INTEGRATED intensity at any given distance over the same solid angle will NOT decrease with distance, because the light isn't actually diminishing, it's only spreading out. So yes, the light from a flashlight will be spread out significantly by the time it reaches space. But most of the light will still reach space.
In other words, it only loses about 30% of its energy. But of course, it loses all of its UV-C and much of its UV-B energy, whereas the flashlight emits very little UV light to begin with (and most of which would be UV-A anyways). Within the visible spectrum, the flashlight should then lose LESS than 30% of its energy to scattering. Now, it might lose more than 30% overall if you count infra-red. But certainly within the visible part of the spectrum, it should be losing less than 30% of its intensity.
Irrelevant. All the light that originated from the flashlight would still hit the earth: it would just be spread over too large an area to make it visible to the naked eye. But we're not talking about how VISIBLE the light from a flashlight pointed at the sky is, we're talking about what happens to it. And most of it will just head off into deep space.
Hmmm. It is said energy cannot be lost. Yet, if we were to suppose that the universe is "open"... that the light could escape into the void of space (where some people think God is)...then it be like...energy got lost?
Light only has one place to go -- from one electron to another electron.