Message from @Satan
Discord ID: 488420212752777217
ok, so the moon is fluorescent
Just as good
Considering we dont know for sure.
if it is equally good, then it still doesnt matter. A new idea has to be better to replace the current idea. In anything, again not just here
Beauty is in the eye of the beholder
Meaning, one idea might be good to one person but another idea might be just as good to another
i am not saying its a bad idea, i am saying if it isnt better then there is no point, at the current time, trying to replace it. if it becomes better, sure replace it
Ive given a pretty good explanation i think. Considering chemiluminescence or phosphorescence can light up minerals and showing that fluorescence can do the same thing and even make it look like a moonlight
Reflection is the easiest answer
But not the right answer necessarily
actually all you said is that bio/chem/phosphoreencence are a thing and something looks on the surface looks like moonlight
Also the temperature differences of the light
Which brings everything into question
you expect them to be the extact temperature?
There must be something more to it all
If the moon was reflecting the sun light, then the moonlight should be warm not cold
But we see the opposite
how it is "cold"
the experiments done show a few degree drop in temp
Its sure not hot
Yes its "colder than"
so do you expect them to be the exact same temp
well i can tell you it isnt flurescent or phosphorecent because both of those rely on the sun to function
or an other light source
Or radiation
light is a form of radiation
so, yes
visible or UV radiation
im struggling to grasp what you mean bby cold light, does a mere drop in temp make the light cold
It can be energy absorbed then it is released as light
so then you have chem/biolumicentent
The drop of temperature makes it cold yes
and going back to my orginal question of, what is the actual cause of the chem/biolumicentant, how it getting the reactants needed
@Satan i mean, if you take a temperature reading of the surface of something being hit by the moonlight, it is generally colder than the same surface just inches away in the moonshade. So moonlight is cold.
that a) isnt chem/biolumicentant b) still requires the sun to hit the moon with visible light
So ?
so when the visible lights hits the moon, it would reflect off
Sunlight ≠ Moonlight | just do an experiment it will show you the results of moonlight lowering the temperature on a plant for example @Satan