![]() Learning about our eco-surfing products would be a great start for everyone.The topic for Day 3 of my 30 Day Song Challenge is “ A song with a location in the title”, and my pick is the mesmerizing “ Bottom of the Deep Blue Sea” by MISSIO. We would be glad to gain support for our objectives by joining our Heal the Oceans campaign and practicing the utilization of economical materials that leave no harm to the environment or bodies of water. Here at Wave Tribe, we uphold the aim of going green and preserving the ecosystem for future generations that is why we create eco-surfing products. ![]() ![]() Unless they are filled with plastics and garbage or considered the world’s dangerous oceans, they are safe and clean. So, the next time you come across a murkier or green ocean, it doesn’t necessarily mean that it’s gross, dirtier, or any less worthy of enjoying. You’d rather swim in a brown ocean than in a blue one that humans have treated as a dumping site. Do you know what does? Nothing other than the massive amount of garbage floating and killing marine life. In the real sense, the color of the sea does not entirely and certainly determine its safety and cleanliness. Stop having the notion that a blue ocean is a safe and clean ocean while a green or brown sea is not. When the light hits the sea, the molecules present in water absorb some photons from the light. Thus red light is absorbed quickly in the ocean, making it reflect blue. In water, absorption is strong in the red and weak in the blue. But mainly, it is the absorption of longer wavelength (red) light. This is a perfect opportunity to confirm its contribution. ![]() If you’ve believed that the ocean is blue because some of the blue light from the sky is reflected, then you must be well-read. However, during sunset and sunrise, the angle at which sunlight enters the atmosphere is drastically changed, and most of the green and blue wavelengths of light are scattered even before reaching the lower atmosphere, so in this case, we see more of the red and orange colors in the sky. So, when we look up at the sky, we see blue. Blue light from the sun is scattered every which way, much more so than some other colors. If you are familiar with or have heard of Raleigh scattering in one of your Science courses, that phenomenon explains why the sky is blue-to explain it simply, the atmosphere tends to scatter shorter wavelength (blue) light to a greater extent than longer wavelength (red) light.
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