anybody in economics in ca?
Please only post questions about math on the math page! You can ask that question on the economics page.
i did.
econ may be somewhat math related (depends on the question) so what is your question?
i know it is, and i have 23.
@TaylorS11 Impersonating a mod= illegal.
yes however that is what the economics page is for :) and @DangerousJesse I'm just trying to help, I am obviously not a mod
23 questions? That's way too much. How about we focus on a few (like 2 or 3).
but you wanna be one.
I know, 'twas a joke. Just let the student ask their question before getting onto them :P
so shut the hell up and leave me alone.
how about RUDE and NO
GET THE HELL OUTTA HERE FOOL
um no and I'm not a fool
FOOL
Are you using it as a noun or an adjective?
IS THE SKY BLUE FOOL
Now would be the time to get onto someone :) Please no unrelated conversations.. They only waste people's time.
Well, technically speaking, Blue light is scattered in all directions by the tiny molecules of air in Earth's atmosphere. Blue is scattered more than other colors because it travels as shorter, smaller waves, so that would mean that yes the sky is blue to answer your question :)
@DangerousJesse this is a perfect example of society today XD "fool"
Actually, the sky only \(looks\) blue. It's a lot like a mirror.. It depends on how your rods and cones perceive it's absorption and reflection of light :)
True!
The atmosphere is denser than we imagine and the different gases give the atmosphere unique properties in how it absorbs, diffuses, and reflects light. When sunlight passes through our atmosphere a portion of it is scattered and absorbed. The remainder either reaches the surface or is reflected back. The portion that makes it to us observers is 75 percent. This process is called diffused sky radiation. So to review, we color because objects due to texture of dyes and surfaces absorb all light wavelengths and reflect back one or more. The reason we see the sky as blue is because the molecules in the air scatter the light absorbing most wavelengths of light except for blue.
right, because blue has the shortest wavelength, so when @wewerkdoe said "is the sky blue fool", the answer was yes and no?
So, if we were to dumb this down a bit by using our knowledge of primary and secondary mixtures from first grade art, we'd come to the conclusion that the sky is brown in general, but blue from our point of view.
So no, the sky is not blue.
Ahhh that is so true! So @wewerkdoe, the answer to your question is no, the sky is not blue "fool"
YALL REALLY TALKING ABOUT THE SKY LMFAO IDIOTS AND YES YOU'RE A FOOL.. FOOL.
you have some personal issues ya may want to take care of
Join our real-time social learning platform and learn together with your friends!