Chapter 12: Problem 93
Explain why the sky is blue and the sunset is yellow-orange.
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These are the key concepts you need to understand to accurately answer the question.
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Chapter 12: Problem 93
Explain why the sky is blue and the sunset is yellow-orange.
These are the key concepts you need to understand to accurately answer the question.
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What is thermal radiation? How does it differ from the other forms of electromagnetic radiation?
Determine the rate of net heat gain (or loss) through a 9 -ft-high, 15 -ft- wide, fixed \(\frac{1}{8}\)-in single-glass window with aluminum frames on the west wall at 3 PM solar time during a typical day in January at a location near \(40^{\circ} \mathrm{N}\) latitude when the indoor and outdoor temperatures are \(70^{\circ} \mathrm{F}\) and \(20^{\circ} \mathrm{F}\), respectively.
We can see the inside of a microwave oven during operation through its glass door, which indicates that visible radiation is escaping the oven. Do you think that the harmful microwave radiation might also be escaping?
The spectral emissivity function of an opaque surface at \(1000 \mathrm{~K}\) is approximated as $$ \varepsilon_{\lambda}= \begin{cases}\varepsilon_{1}=0.4, & 0 \leq \lambda<2 \mu \mathrm{m} \\ \varepsilon_{2}=0.7, & 2 \mu \mathrm{m} \leq \lambda<6 \mu \mathrm{m} \\ \varepsilon_{3}=0.3, & 6 \mu \mathrm{m} \leq \lambda<\infty\end{cases} $$ Determine the average emissivity of the surface and the rate of radiation emission from the surface, in \(\mathrm{W} / \mathrm{m}^{2}\).
The variation of the spectral transmissivity of a \(0.6\)-cm-thick glass window is as given in Fig. P12-80. Determine the average transmissivity of this window for solar radiation \((T \approx 5800 \mathrm{~K})\) and radiation coming from surfaces at room temperature \((T \approx 300 \mathrm{~K})\). Also, determine the amount of solar radiation transmitted through the window for incident solar radiation of \(650 \mathrm{~W} / \mathrm{m}^{2}\).
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