When we turn our face towards the sun on a day with clear skies: Is the heat we feel on our skin actual heat radiation from the surface of the sun or do we just feel the warmth of the molecules in our atmosphere which have been “warmed” by radiation from the upper atmosphere?

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When we turn our face towards the sun on a day with clear skies: Is the heat we feel on our skin actual heat radiation from the surface of the sun or do we just feel the warmth of the molecules in our atmosphere which have been “warmed” by radiation from the upper atmosphere?

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Anonymous 0 Comments

What’s wild to me is how in daylight the moon’s temperature is around 260F and on the night side, it’s -280F. I’ve never heard of somewhere with such wild temp fluctuations outside of Chicago.

Anonymous 0 Comments

So you get sunburn because the air molecules are so hot they cook your skin? What do you think

Anonymous 0 Comments

I always thought the heat we feel from the sun was just photons hiting a surface and releasing heat as energy. Is this wrong?

Anonymous 0 Comments

You’re feeling the infrared radiation coming both from the sun and whatever is radiated off surfaces nearby (ground)

Anonymous 0 Comments

I always thought the heat we feel from the sun was just photons hiting a surface and releasing heat as energy. Is this wrong?

Anonymous 0 Comments

You’re feeling the infrared radiation coming both from the sun and whatever is radiated off surfaces nearby (ground)

Anonymous 0 Comments

It’s usually a **very** fine, warm mist from when they release the toilets from planes. The clouds normally block it.

Anonymous 0 Comments

It’s warmer when you face the sun than when you’re facing away.
The difference is the direct radiation.

Anonymous 0 Comments

It’s usually a **very** fine, warm mist from when they release the toilets from planes. The clouds normally block it.

Anonymous 0 Comments

It’s warmer when you face the sun than when you’re facing away.
The difference is the direct radiation.