Skip to content

Instantly share code, notes, and snippets.

@Viper-7
Created September 30, 2023 16:18
Show Gist options
  • Save Viper-7/d7ecb13657d79e40ec2cb7ca9b7323a7 to your computer and use it in GitHub Desktop.
Save Viper-7/d7ecb13657d79e40ec2cb7ca9b7323a7 to your computer and use it in GitHub Desktop.

*** emerhyst-20b.Q6_K.gguf ***

You are a helpful assistant.

Instruction:

Why is the sky blue

Response:

Coz water.

Instruction:

But why is water blue?

Response:

It's not. The sky is blue because of the scattering of light by molecules in the atmosphere. When sunlight travels through the atmosphere, it interacts with these molecules, such as nitrogen and oxygen, which are more abundant in the lower atmosphere. These molecules are small compared to the wavelengths of visible light, so they scatter the light in all directions. Blue light has shorter wavelengths than other colors of the visible spectrum, so it is scattered more strongly, making the sky appear blue. The sun itself is actually a yellow-white color, but its light appears white to us when we see it through the atmosphere because our eyes combine the different colors of light that reach our retinas.

*** Xwin-LM-13B-V01 Q8 ***

You are a helpful assistant. USER: Why is the sky blue ASSISTANT: Coz water.USER: But why is water blue? ASSISTANT: Water is not inherently blue. The sky appears blue due to a phenomenon called Rayleigh scattering. This is when shorter wavelengths of light, like blue, scatter more than longer wavelengths, like red. In the atmosphere, blue light is scattered more, making the sky appear blue.

Water can appear blue due to various reasons:

  1. Reflection: When water reflects the sky, it appears blue.
  2. Scattering: Water molecules can scatter light, causing it to appear blue.
  3. Absorption: Water can absorb other colors, like red, and scatter the blue light, making the water appear blue.
  4. Turbidity: When water is turbid or filled with particles, like silt or clay, the blue light is scattered more, making the water appear blue.
  5. Depth: The deeper the water, the more the blue light is scattered, making the water appear blue.

So, the sky appears blue because of the way light scatters in the atmosphere, and water can appear blue due to various reasons related to the scattering and absorption of light by water molecules and particles in the water.

*** Undimix V2 Q8 ***

You are a helpful assistant.

Instruction:

Why is the sky blue

Response:

Coz water.

Instruction:

But why is water blue?

Response:

Coz of a thing called Rayleigh scattering. When sunlight hits tiny molecules in the air, it scatters in all directions. Blue light gets scattered more than other colors because it has a shorter wavelength. So when we look at the sky, we see mostly blue light that has been scattered by the air. That's why the sky is blue!

*** Undimix V1 Q6K ***

You are a helpful assistant.

Instruction:

Why is the sky blue

Response:

Coz water.

Instruction:

But why is water blue?

Response:

Coz of a thing called Rayleigh scattering. When sunlight enters Earth's atmosphere, it hits tiny molecules of gases like nitrogen and oxygen. These molecules scatter the light in all directions, but they scatter shorter (blue) wavelengths more than longer (red) wavelengths. This is why the sky looks blue during the day. At sunrise and sunset, the light has to travel through more of the Earth's atmosphere, so more of the blue light is scattered away, leaving mostly red and orange light to reach our eyes.

*** Synthia 7B Q8 ***

SYSTEM: You are a helpful assistant. USER: Why is the sky blue ASSISTANT: Coz water. USER: But why is water blue? ASSISTANT: Water appears blue because it reflects the color of the sky. When sunlight enters the Earth's atmosphere, it scatters in all directions. Blue light has a shorter wavelength and is scattered more than other colors, which is why the sky appears blue.

Sign up for free to join this conversation on GitHub. Already have an account? Sign in to comment