Scattering
Did
you ever wonder why the sky was blue?
In
1971, the English scientist, Lord Rayleigh explained the scattering
of Light. The scattering of particles smaller than a wavelength
is now also referred to as Rayleigh scattering.
The air is filled with thousands of molecules of nitrogen
and oxygen. These molecules are spread out randomly. Photons of
Light can set these molecules into an oscillation. When this happens,
the molecules will absorb and emit photons. The emitted photons
are scattered in a random manner because of the random placement
of the molecules themselves.
Light, which is closer to the ultraviolet part of the electromagnetic
spectrum, will scatter more widely than Light that is closer to
the infrared part of the electromagnetic spectrum. This is because
the molecules of nitrogen and oxygen have natural frequencies that
are in the ultraviolet zone. The closer a frequency gets to the
natural frequency of the object, the larger the amplitude of the
oscillation will be. As the frequency of the Light approaches that
of the UV frequency (this would mean the colors like blue and violet),
the amplitude of the oscillation would be larger, and the photons
would be scattered more widely.
The sky therefore appears to be blue because when the white
Light of the sun is scattered, the blue color is scattered the most.
It does not appear to be violet, although violet would scatter the
most, because there is not much violet in the sunLight. The red
side of the spectrum can travel through the atmosphere farther because
it does not scatter as much. But, the sky is not always blue.
For instance, during sunrise and sunset, the sky appears to be reddish.
This is because the rays from the sun approach the earth at closer
angles to the atmosphere, and have more molecules to penetrate through.
The blue Light is scattered very far about, and the red and orange
Lights are the only ones that are able to get through the atmosphere.
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