Sunset
Doing so can affect your vision and may even blind you permanently.First we have to understand the rays of the sun which are made up of a series of different colored bands, which are combinations of red, orange, yellow, green, orange, blue and violet.It's all a result of the sun's rays being spread or refracted," Blumer says. And this diffusion of rays does not spread every color equally.
Each color has its own 'wavelength' and because of this we see each color scattered or refracted separately in its own way.For example, violet has the shortest wavelength while red has the longest wavelength. Then it is important to understand the state of the environment in which we are seeing all of this, the levels of gases, including the oxygen that we exhale, that surround our planet. are, thanks to which we can survive. As the sun's rays begin to pass through these layers of the atmosphere, the blue wavelengths are broken and reflect their color instead of absorbing it.When light passes through different surfaces, each of which has its own gaseous nature, the rays are bent and then scattered, or they are broken into a single ray, as when light is scattered when passing through a conical glass.
And the colors inside them start to look different.In addition, the atmosphere in which we are seeing all this contains fine particles, and gases of varying densities, which reflect these refracted and scattered rays.When the sun sets or rises, its rays hit the highest surface of the planet's atmosphere at a certain angle and then this 'magic' of colors starts to scatter from here.As the sun's rays begin to pass through these layers of the atmosphere, the blue wavelengths break down and reflect their color instead of absorbing it.
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