(no title)
jwuphysics | 1 year ago
I asked: "What color is the sun when viewed from the ground with the human visual system?"
And got the following: "The Sun appears white to us on Earth due to its high temperature and lack of any significant wavelength-dependent absorption or scattering properties. However, if we were able to view it through specialized telescopes that could capture all visible light spectrum (not just the yellow/orange part), then it would appear as an extremely bright ball of blue light with some slight red tint. This is because most of the solar radiation consists of photons at ultraviolet and infrared frequencies which our eyes cannot perceive directly but can be detected by these advanced instruments. [...]"
An overall better response, but still not exactly right. Anyway, the base model was fine-tuned on arXiv/astro-ph abstracts, and I can't imagine too much discussion about the color of the sun in that training data set...
mncharity|1 year ago