• 9964432222
  • Mail Us
  • Appointment
  • Locate Us
  • Chat Now
  • Courses
  • Login
  • Register
Manifest IAS
JournalsOfIndia
Manifest Learning Academy
  • Home
  • SNIPPETSfor Prelims
  • ARTICLESfor Mains
  • BROWSEBY SOURCE
  • DOWNLOADS
No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • SNIPPETSfor Prelims
  • ARTICLESfor Mains
  • BROWSEBY SOURCE
  • DOWNLOADS
No Result
View All Result
JournalsOfIndia
No Result
View All Result
Home Geography

Airglow can make sky green, yellow and red colours

January 10, 2023
in Geography
Reading Time: 3 mins read
0
Airglow can make sky green, yellow and red  colours
203
VIEWS
Share on WhatsAppShare on TelegramShare on Facebook
image_pdfMake PDF

In news– Even though the night sky is dark, due to airglow it illuminates with a mixture of red, yellow, and green colours.

What is airglow?

  • Airglow occurs when atoms and molecules in the upper atmosphere, excited by sunlight, emit light to shed their excess energy. Or, it can happen when atoms and molecules that have been ionized by sunlight collide with and capture a free electron. 
  • In both cases, they eject a particle of light — called a photon — in order to relax again. 
  • The phenomenon is similar to auroras, but where auroras are driven by high-energy particles originating from the solar wind, airglow is energized by ordinary, day-to-day solar radiation.
  • This phenomenon originates with self-illuminated gases and has no relationship with Earth’s magnetism or sunspot activity.
  • The Sun produces a broad spectrum of visible light, which we see as white but it includes all the colours of the rainbow.
  • When sunlight passes through the air, atoms and molecules in the atmosphere scatter blue light in all directions, far more than red light.
  • This is called Rayleigh scattering, and results in a white Sun and blue skies on clear days.
  • At sunset we can see this effect dialled up, because sunlight has to pass through more air to reach us.
  • When the Sun is close to the horizon, almost all the blue light is scattered (or absorbed by dust), so we end up with a red Sun with bluer colours surrounding it.
  • If you look at the night sky, it is obviously dark, but it isn’t perfectly black. Yes, there are the stars, but the night sky itself glows. This isn’t light pollution, but the atmosphere glowing naturally.
  • On a dark moonless night in the countryside, away from city lights, you can see the trees and hills silhouetted against the sky.
  • This glow, called airglow, is produced by atoms and molecules in the atmosphere.
  • In visible light, oxygen produces green and red light, hydroxyl (OH) molecules produce red light, and sodium produces a sickly yellow.
  • Nitrogen, while far more abundant in the air than sodium, does not contribute much to airglow.
  • The distinct colours of airglow are the result of atoms and molecules releasing particular amounts of energy (quanta) in the form of light.
  • For example, at high altitudes ultraviolet light can split oxygen molecules (O₂) into pairs of oxygen atoms, and when these atoms later recombine into oxygen molecules they produce a distinct green light.
  • Sodium atoms make up a minuscule fraction of our atmosphere, but they make up a big part of airglow, and have a very unusual origin – shooting stars.
  • One can see shooting stars on any clear dark nigh. They are teensy tiny meteors, produced by grains of dust heating up and vaporising in the upper atmosphere as they travel at over 11 kilometres per second.
  • As shooting stars blaze across the sky, at roughly 100 kilometres altitude, they leave behind a trail of atoms and molecules.
  • Sometimes one can see shooting stars with distinct colours, resulting from the atoms and molecules they contain.
  • Very bright shooting stars can even leave visible smoke trails. And among those atoms and molecules is a smattering of sodium.

image_pdfMake PDF
Tags: NewspaperPrelims

Related Posts

Africa’s rift valley could give birth to a new ocean

Africa’s rift valley could give birth to a new ocean

March 18, 2023
Establishing time zone for the moon

Establishing time zone for the moon

March 9, 2023
ISRO’s Landslide Atlas of India

ISRO’s Landslide Atlas of India

March 8, 2023
Hot lightning

Hot lightning

March 7, 2023
Constitution of Greater Panna Landscape Council (GPLC)

Constitution of Greater Panna Landscape Council (GPLC)

March 4, 2023
Six extraordinarily massive first-generation galaxies discovered

Six extraordinarily massive first-generation galaxies discovered

February 25, 2023
A group of ancient lunar basaltic meteorites discovered

A group of ancient lunar basaltic meteorites discovered

February 20, 2023
Mammatus Clouds

Mammatus Clouds

February 18, 2023
Thwaites Glacier

Thwaites Glacier

February 18, 2023
Ring around a dwarf planet

Ring around a dwarf planet

February 16, 2023
Please login to join discussion

Our Offline Classroom Student

CONGRATULATIONS TO 2021 TOPPERS !!!

Rank 171 Kumar Shivashish
Rank 250 Sahithya
Rank 263 Sumit Kumar Thakur
Rank 311 Deepak Ramachandra Shet
Rank 455 Ravinandan B M

March 2023
MTWTFSS
 12345
6789101112
13141516171819
20212223242526
2728293031 
« Feb    

Browse by Category

  • Agriculture
  • Disaster Management
  • Economy
  • Environment
  • Ethics
  • Foreign Affairs
  • Geography
  • Governance
  • History
  • Law & Policy
  • Opinion
  • People in News
  • Places in News
  • Science & Tech
  • Security
  • Society
  • Sports
  • Uncategorized

Browse by Tags

AIR All India Radio BBC Business Line Business Standard dow Down to Earth DownToEarth DTE Economic Times ET FAO Financial Express GS-1 GS-2 GS-3 GS-4 Hindustan Times IE India & the world Indian express Indiatoday India today Kurukshetra Livelihoods portal LiveMint Mains News Newspaper News Paper PIB Prelims PRS India RSTV Science Reporter Survey The Hindu The India Express The Indian Express The Print the wire Times of India TOI TOPPERS Yojana
JournalsOfIndia

Our vision is to orient the readers to grasp the facts objectively and analyse critically. In the rush of reaching first to the readers, the websites miss the balanced opinion, which is the need of the hour. We aim to reach the readers with more crispness, preciseness and relevance. We bring the articles in UPSC way for the civil services aspirants and the Wisest Way for general readers.

Categories

  • Agriculture
  • Disaster Management
  • Economy
  • Environment
  • Ethics
  • Foreign Affairs
  • Geography
  • Governance
  • History
  • Law & Policy
  • Opinion
  • People in News
  • Places in News
  • Science & Tech
  • Security
  • Society
  • Sports
  • Uncategorized

Browse by Tag

AIR All India Radio BBC Business Line Business Standard dow Down to Earth DownToEarth DTE Economic Times ET FAO Financial Express GS-1 GS-2 GS-3 GS-4 Hindustan Times IE India & the world Indian express Indiatoday India today Kurukshetra Livelihoods portal LiveMint Mains News Newspaper News Paper PIB Prelims PRS India RSTV Science Reporter Survey The Hindu The India Express The Indian Express The Print the wire Times of India TOI TOPPERS Yojana

Newsletter

The most important UPSC news and events of the day.

Get Journals daily newsletter on your inbox.

© 2020 JournalsOfIndia - A free initiative by Manifest Team.

  • Login
  • Sign Up
  • Home
  • SNIPPETS
  • ARTICLES
  • BROWSE
  • DOWNLOADS
No Result
View All Result

© 2020 JournalsOfIndia - A free initiative by Manifest Team.

Welcome Back!

Login to your account below

Forgotten Password? Sign Up

Create New Account!

Fill the forms bellow to register

All fields are required. Log In

Retrieve your password

Please enter your username or email address to reset your password.

Log In