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The Wild File The Wild File: Outdoor Questions Answered SUBMIT YOUR QUESTION FOR THE WILD FILE HERE: wildfile@outsidemag.com If we use your question in an upcoming issue of Outside, you'll receive a free one-year subscription! By Jason Daley
Q) Do plants have finite and predictable life spans?
Anonymous, Brooklyn, New York In short: Rayleigh scattering. The precise explication of this phenomenon involves a complicated mathematical equation formulated in 1871 by Nobel Prizewinning physicist John William Strutt, a.k.a. Lord Rayleigh, with some refinement by Einstein a few decades later. In layman's terms, it goes like this: Visible light travels from the sun to the earth in waves; colors with longer wavelengths, like red, orange, and yellow, pass through the molecules of oxygen and nitrogen that make up the earth's atmosphere, creating the white light that brightens our days. Blue and violet, with much shorter wavelengths, scatter, creating that lovely azure canopy. So why isn't the sky violet, which has the shortest visible wavelength? Actually, to some animals it ishuman eyes are just more sensitive to blue. But creatures with better violet perception, like birds and the pop star Prince, live under grape-colored skies. Q) Is there any health benefit to drinking your own urine? Madison, Wisconsin-based freelance writer JASON DALEY is a frequent contributor to Outside. Subscribe to Outside and get a FREE Gift! Give the gift of Outside Magazine! Subscribe to Outside Online's free weekly e-mail newsletter featuring gear reviews, fitness advice, galleries, podcasts, and more. |
TODAY'S NEWS UPDATE!
Grand Theft Dino Graverobbing dates back to ancient times, but this may be the oldest burial site ever looted: the 65-million-year-old... ![]()
The Gear Junkie: Ski and Snowboard Gear...
By Stephen Regenold Winter is upon us, and with it ski areas across the country are ... ![]() advertisement
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