What Happens with Sun Light?

Sleepily, you open your eyes. Sunlight is streaming through your window. It is time to get up and start your day.

The sunshine lit up your room and woke you. But the light from the sun does much more than that. It makes life on the earth possible.

Sunlight gives us energy. This energy heats the earth so that animals, plants, and people can live. It also makes green plants grow. All the food we eat comes from plants or from animals that eat plants.

Light is so important that people have invented ways to make it. We have candles, torches, electric lights, neon signs, and lasers. All these things help us to see. But light does other things, too.

The sun is the source of all heat and light energy on Earth. Aside from the obvious benefits of solar energy, and aside from our obvious knowledge that the sun is the source of all food on earth, how much direct or indirect sun does the human body need to survive.

We know that all plants require a certain amount of sunlight to make food and survive, through a process called photosynthesis. We know that animals get their energy from the food they eat. However, animals would not have a food source, if it were not for the sun. For example, some animals that live deep underwater, where no sunlight exists, but they feed on organic matter (dead plants and organisms that sink to the ocean floor from the surface). This organic matter contains energy that was first produced by the sun.

Humans get our energy from the food we eat, and all of that food is derived from the energy of the sun. So, we need the sun to survive. But do humans need direct exposure to sunlight to survive, not counting our food and heat sources?

A study published in the Archives of Internal Medicine, stated that humans need sunlight for vitamin D. The study shows that those with the lowest vitamin D levels have more than double the risk of dying from heart disease and other causes over an eight-year period compared with those with the highest levels of vitamin D.

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