Qutb al Mutasarif Mawlana Shaykh Hisham al Kabbani Rabbani al Haqqani
Your
Sight is From
Nur -I- Ahmad
(s)
Wherever you Look for Allah know that "There is Nothing Like onto Him" but
Look for His Signs. The greatest of His Signs is
The Eternal Muhammad RasulAllah
from Allah, The Suns Gift
to Creation : Breathing, Seeing, Food ,Warmth and much more...
Holy
Quran Rahman 55.13 Then which of the
favors of your Lord will ye deny?
That
the radiation from the sun (and from many sequence stars) should be
concentrated into a minuscule band of the electromagnetic spectrum which
provides precisely the radiation required to maintain life on earth is very
remarkable.
Ian Campbell, British Physicist
The sun is probably the one thing we see most often throughout our lives.
Whenever we raise our sight to the sky during the day, we can see its dazzling
light. If someone were to come up and ask "What good is the sun? we would
probably reply without even a thought that the sun gives us light and heat.
That answer, although a bit superficial, would be correct.
But does the sun just "happen" to radiate light and heat for us?
Is it accidental and unplanned?
Or is the sun specially designed for us?
Could this great ball of fire in the sky be a gigantic "lamp" that was
created so as to meet our exact needs?
Recent research indicates that the answer to the last two questions is
"yes". "Yes" because in sunlight there is a design that inspires amazement.
The Right Wavelength
THE DIFFERENT WAVELENGTHS OF ELECTROMAGNETIC RADIATION
The stars and other sources of light in the universe do not all give out
the same kind of radiation. Instead, they radiate energy with a broad
range of wavelengths. Gamma rays, which have the shortest wavelengths,
are just 1/1025 the length of the longest radio waves. Strangely enough,
nearly all of the radiation emitted by the sun falls into a single band
that is also 1/1025 of the whole spectrum. The reason, is that the only
kinds of radiation that are necessary and fit for life fall in this
narrow band.
Both light and heat are different manifestations of electromagnetic
radiation.
In all its manifestations, electromagnetic radiation moves through
space in waves similar to those created when a stone is thrown into a
lake.
And just as the ripples created by the stone may have different
heights and the distances between them may vary, electromagnetic radiation
also has different wavelengths.
The analogy shouldn't be taken too far however because there are huge
differences in the wavelengths of electromagnetic radiation.
Some are several kilometers long while others are shorter than a
billionth of a centimeter and the
other wavelengths are to be found in a smooth, unbroken spectrum
everywhere in between.
To make things easier, scientists divide this spectrum up according to
wavelength and they assign different names to different parts of it.
The radiation with the shortest wavelength (one-trillionth of a
centimeter) for example is called "gamma
rays":
these rays pack tremendous amounts of energy.
The longest wavelengths are called
"radio waves":
they can be several kilometers long but carry very little energy.
(One result of this is that radio waves are quite harmless to us while
exposure to gamma rays can be fatal.)
"Light"
is a form of electromagnetic radiation that lies between these two extremes.
The first thing to be noticed about the electromagnetic spectrum is how
broad it is: the longest wavelength is 1025 times the size of the
shortest one. Written out in full, 1025 looks like this:
10,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000
A number that big is pretty meaningless by itself. Let's make a few
comparisons.
For example, in 4 billion years (the estimated age of the earth) there
are about 1017 seconds.
If you wanted to count from 1 to 1025
and did so at the rate of one number a second nonstop, day and night, it
would take you 100 million times longer than the age of the earth!
If we
were to build a pile of 1025 playing cards, we would end up with
a stack stretching halfway across the observable universe.
This is the vast spectrum over which the different wavelengths of the
universe's electromagnetic energy extend.
Now the curious
thing about this is that the electromagnetic energy radiated by our sun is
restricted to a very, very narrow section of this spectrum.
70% of the sun's radiation has wavelengths between 0.3 and 1.50
microns and within that narrow band there are three types of light:
visible light,
near-infrared light, and
ultraviolet light.
Three kinds of light might seem quite enough but all three combined make
up an almost insignificant section of the total spectrum.
Remember our 1025 playing cards extending halfway across
the universe?
Compared with the total, the width of the band of light radiated by
the sun corresponds to just one of those cards!
Why should sunlight be limited to such a narrow range?
The answer to that question is crucial because the only radiation that is
capable of supporting life on earth is the kind that has wavelengths falling
within this narrow range.
In Energy and the Atmosphere, the British physicist Ian Campbell
addresses this question and says "That the radiation from the sun (and from
many sequence stars) should be concentrated into a minuscule band of the
electromagnetic spectrum which provides precisely the radiation required to
maintain life on earth is very remarkable." According to Campbell, this
situation is "staggering".
Let us now examine this "staggering design of light" more closely.
From Ultraviolet to Infrared
We said that there was a range of 1:1025 in the sizes of the
longest and shortest electromagnetic wavelengths.
We also said that the amount of energy that was carried depended upon
the wavelength:
shorter wavelengths pack more energy than longer ones.
Another difference has to do with how radiation at different
wavelengths interacts with matter.
The shortest forms of radiation are called (in increasing order of
wavelength)
"gamma rays",
"X-rays", and
"ultraviolet light".
They have the ability to split atoms because they are so highly
energized. All three can cause molecules-especially organic molecules-to
break up.
In effect, they tear matter apart at the atomic or molecular level.
Radiation with wavelengths longer than visible light begins at infrared
and extends up to radio waves.
Its impact upon matter is less serious because the energy it conveys
is not as great.
The "impact upon matter" that we spoke of has to do with chemical
reactions.
A significant number of chemical reactions can take place only if
energy is added to the reaction.
The energy required to start a chemical reaction is called its "energy
threshold".
If the energy is less than this threshold, the reaction will never
start and if it is more, it is of no good: in either case, the energy will
have been wasted.
In the whole electromagnetic spectrum,
there is just one little band that has the energy to cross this threshold
exactly.
Its wavelengths range between 0.70 microns and 0.40 microns and if
you'd like to see it, you can: just raise your head and look around-it's
called "visible light".
This radiation causes chemical reactions to take place in your
eyes and that is why you are able to see.
The radiation known as "visible light" makes up 41% of sunlight even
though it occupies less than 1/1025 of the whole electromagnetic
spectrum.
In his famous article "Life and Light", which appeared in
Scientific American, the renowned physicist George Wald considered this
matter and wrote "the radiation that is useful in prompting orderly chemical
reactions comprises the great bulk of that of our sun."
That the sun should radiate light so exactly right for life is indeed an
extraordinary example of design.
Nearly all of the sun's
radiation is restricted to a narrow band of wavelengths ranging from 0.3
to 1.50 microns. This band encompasses near ultraviolet, visible, and
infrared light.
Is the rest of the light the sun radiates good for anything?
When we look at this part of the light we see that a large part of solar
radiation falling outside the range of visible light is in the section of
the spectrum called "near infrared".
This begins where visible light ends
and again occupies a very small part of the total spectrum-less than 1/1025.
Is infrared light good for anything?
Yes, but this time it's no use to look around because you can't see it
with the naked eye.
However you can easily feel it: the warmth you feel on your face when
you look up on a bright sunny summer or spring day is caused by infrared
radiation coming from the sun.
The sun's infrared radiation is what carries the thermal energy that
keeps Earth warm.
It too is as essential for life as visible light is. And the
fascinating thing is that our sun was apparently created just to serve for
these two purposes, because these two kinds of light make up the greatest
part of sunlight.
And the third part of sunlight? Is that of any benefit?
You can bet on it.
This is "near ultraviolet light" and it makes up the
smallest fraction of sunlight.
Like all ultraviolet light, it is highly
energized and it can cause damage to living cells.
The sun's ultraviolet
light however is the "least harmful" kind since it is closest to visible
light.
Although overexposure to solar ultraviolet light has been shown to
cause cancer and cellular mutations, it has one vital benefit: the
ultraviolet light concentrated in such a miniscule band is needed for the
synthesis of vitamin D in humans and other vertebrates.
(Vitamin D is necessary for the formation and nourishment of bone:
without it, bones become soft or malformed, a disease called rickets that
occurs in people deprived of sunlight for great lengths of time.)
In other words, all the radiation emitted by the sun is essential to
life: none of it is wasted.
The amazing thing is that all this radiation is
limited to a 1/1025 interval of the whole electromagnetic
spectrum yet it is sufficient to keep us warm, see, and allow all the
chemical reactions necessary for life to take place.
Even if all the other conditions necessary for life and mentioned
elsewhere in this book existed,
if the light radiated by the sun fell into
any other part of the electromagnetic spectrum, there could be no life on
Earth.
It is certainly impossible to explain the fulfillment of this
condition having a probability of 1 in 1025 with a logic of
coincidence.
And if all this were not enough, light does something else: it keeps us
fed, too!
His Light Is Source of Your Sustenance:
"Holy
Quran Surah Noor 24.35{ 24=light 24 hours in a
day} :Allah
is the Light of the heavens and the earth. The Parable of His Light is as if
there were a Niche and within it a Lamp: the Lamp enclosed in Glass: the
glass as it were a brilliant star: Lit from a blessed Tree, an Olive,
neither of the east nor of the west, whose oil is well-nigh luminous, though
fire scarce touched it: Light upon Light! Allah doth guide whom He will to
His Light: Allah doth set forth Parables for men: and Allah doth know all
things. "
Photosynthesis and Light
Photosynthesis is a chemical process whose name almost everyone who's
ever gone to school will be familiar with.
Most people however fail to realize how vitally important this process
is for life on Earth or what a mystery its workings are.
First let's brush off our high-school chemistry and take a look at the
formula for the photosynthesis reaction:
THE DIFFERENT WAVELENGTHS OF ELECTROMAGNETIC RADIATION
The stars and other sources of light in the universe do not all give out
the same kind of radiation.
Instead, they radiate energy with a broad range of wavelengths.
Gamma rays, which have the shortest wavelengths, are just 1/1025 the
length of the longest radio waves.
Strangely enough, nearly all of the radiation emitted by the sun falls
into a single band that is also 1/1025 of the whole spectrum.
The reason, is that the only kinds of radiation that are necessary and
fit for life fall in this narrow band.
6H2O + 6CO2 +Sunlight --> C6H12O6
+ 6O2
Glucose
Translated into words this means:
Water and carbon dioxide and sunlight
produces glucose and oxygen.
To be more exact what is happening in this chemical reaction is that six
molecules of water (H2O) combine with six molecules of carbon
dioxide (CO2) in a reaction that is energized by sunlight.
When
the reaction is complete, the result is a single molecule of glucose ( C6H12O6),
a simple sugar that is a fundamental element of nutrition-, and six
molecules of gaseous oxygen (O2).
The source of all nutriments on our planet, glucose contains a great
deal of energy.
Simple though this reaction may look, it is in fact incredibly complex.
There is only one place where it occurs: in plants.
The plants of this world produce the basic food for all living things.
Every other living thing is ultimately nourished in one way or another
by glucose.
Herbivorous animals eat the plants themselves and carnivorous animals
eat plants and/or other animals.
Human beings are no exception: our energy is derived from the food we
eat and comes from the same source. Every apple, potato, chocolate, or
steak or anything else you eat is supplying you with energy that
came from the sun.
But photosynthesis is important for another reason.
The reaction has two products: in addition to glucose, it also
releases six molecules of oxygen.
What's happening here is that plants are continuously cleaning up an
atmosphere that is constantly being "polluted" by air-breathing
creatures-human beings and animals,
whose energy is derived from combustion in oxygen, a reaction that
produces carbon dioxide.
If plants didn't release oxygen, the oxygen-breathers would eventually
use up all the free oxygen in the atmosphere and that would be the end of
them.
Instead, the oxygen in the atmosphere is constantly being replenished
by plants.
For hundreds of millions of years, plants have been busy doing something
no laboratory has ever been able to duplicate: Using sunlight, the
produce food. A crucial condition for this extraordinary transformation
however is that the light that the plants receive must be precisely
right for photosynthesis to take place.
Without photosynthesis, plant life could not exist; and without plant
life, there would be no animal or human life.
This marvelous chemical reaction, which has never been duplicated in
any laboratory, is taking place deep in the grass you step on and in trees
you may not even notice.
It once occurred in the vegetables on your dinner plate. It is one of
the fundamental processes of life.
The interesting thing is what a carefully-designed process photosynthesis
is.
When we study it, we can't help but observe that there is a perfect
balance between plant photosynthesis and the energy consumption of
oxygen-breathers.
Plants supply glucose and oxygen.
Oxygen-breathers burn the glucose in the oxygen in their cells to get
energy and they release carbon dioxide and water (in effect, they're
reversing the photosynthesis reaction) that the plants use to make more
glucose and oxygen.
And so it goes on, a continuous cycle that is called the
"carbon cycle" and it is powered by the energy of
the sun.
In order to see how perfectly-created this cycle truly is, let us focus
our attention on just one of its elements for the moment:
the sunlight.
In the first part of this chapter we looked at sunlight and found that
its radiation components were specially tailored to allow life on Earth.
Could sunlight also be deliberately tailored for photosynthesis as
well?
Or are plants flexible enough so that they can perform the reaction no
matter which kind of light reaches them?
The American astronomer George Greenstein discusses this in The Symbiotic
Universe:
Chlorophyll is the molecule that accomplishes
photosynthesis...
The mechanism of photosynthesis is initiated by the
absorption of sunlight by a chlorophyll molecule.
But in order for this to occur, the light must be of the
right color. Light of the wrong color won't do the
trick.
A good analogy is that of a television set.
In order for
the set to receive a given channel it must be tuned to that channel;
tune it
differently and the reception will not occur.
It is the same with
photosynthesis, the Sun functioning as the transmitter in the analogy and
the chlorophyll molecule as the receiving TV set.
If the molecule and the
Sun are not tuned to each other-tuned in the sense of colour- photosynthesis
will not occur. As it turns out, the sun's color is just right.
THE FITNESS OF SUNLIGHT AND CHLOROPHYLL
Plants are able to perform photosynthesis because the chlorophyll
molecules in their cells are sensitive to sunlight. But chlorophyll is
only able to use a very limited range of light wavelengths and those are
the wavelengths that the sun radiates the most. What is even more
interesting is that this interval corresponds to just 1/1025
of the whole electromagnetic spectrum.
In the two graphs above, the extraordinary fitness between sunlight and
chlorophyll can be seen. In the upper chart is the distribution of the
light emitted by the sun. In the lower one is the light under which
photosynthesis will work. The fact that these two curves are almost
identical is an indication of how perfectly designed visible light is. <
The absorption of light is accomplished by
the excitation of electrons in molecules to higher energy states,
and the
same no matter what molecule you are discussing.
Furthermore, light is
composed of photons, packets of energy and photons of the wrong energy
simply can not be absorbed…
As things stand in reality, there is a good fit between
the physics of stars and that of molecules.
Failing this fit, however, life would have been
impossible.
No plant can only perform
photosynthesis except within a very narrow range of light wavelengths. And
that range corresponds exactly to the light given out by the sun.
The harmony between stellar and molecular physics that Greenstein refers
to is a harmony too extraordinary ever to be explained by chance. There was
only one chance in 1025 of the sun's providing just the right
kind of light necessary for us and that there should be molecules in our
world that are capable of using that light. This perfect harmony is
unquestionably proof of intentional, deliberate design.
In other words, there is a single Creator, the Ruler of starlight and of
the molecules of plants Who has created all these things in harmony with one
other, exactly as is revealed in the Qur'an:
Holy Quran Rahman 55.5
The sun and the moon follow courses
(exactly) computed
The Light of Your Eyes
We have seen how the light coming to us from the sun consists of just
three narrow bands of the electromagnetic spectrum:
1) Infrared light, whose wavelengths are longer than visible light and
which keeps Earth warm.
2) A small amount of ultraviolet light, whose wavelengths are shorter
than visible light and which is necessary for the synthesis of vitamin D
among other things.
3) Visible light, which makes vision possible and supports plant
photosynthesis.
The existence of a range of "visible light" is as important for the
support of biological vision as it is for photosynthesis.
The reason is that it is impossible for a biological eye to see any
band of the spectrum outside that of visible light and a very small
section of near infrared.
To explain why this should be so, we first need to understand how vision
takes place.
It begins with particles of light called "photons"
{ From the Sun} passing
through the pupil of eye and falling onto the surface of the retina located
at the back of the eye.
The retina contains cells that are light-sensitive.
They are so sensitive that each can recognize when even a single photon
strikes it.
The photon's energy activates a complex molecule called "rhodopsine",
large quantities of which are contained in these cells.
The rhodopsine in turn activates other cells and those activate still
others in turn.
Eventually an electrical current is generated and this is carried to
the brain by the optic nerves.
The first requirement for this system to work is that the retina cell
must be able to recognize when a photon strikes it.
For that to happen, the
photon must carry an exact amount of energy: if it is too much or too less,
it won't activate the formation of rhodopsine.
Changing the size of the eye makes no difference: the crucial thing is
the harmony between the size of the cell and the wavelengths of the
photons coming in.
The only rays of light that are suitable for biological vision have
wavelengths that fall within the range of what is called "visible
light". A large part of the energy that is emitted by the sun falls in
that range.
Designing an organic eye that could see other ranges of the
electromagnetic spectrum turns out to be impossible in a world dominated by
carbon-based life.
In Nature's Destiny, Michael Denton explains this subject in detail
and confirms that an organic eye can only see within the range of visible
light.
While other models of eyes that could, in theory, be designed, none of
them would be able to see different ranges of the spectrum. Denton tells
us why:
UV, X-ray, and gamma rays are too energetic and are highly
destructive, while infrared and radio waves are too weak to be detected
because they impart so little energy interacting with matter...
And so it
would appear that for several different reasons, the visual region of the
electromagnetic spectrum is the one region supremely fit for biological
vision and particularly for the high-resolution vertebrate camera eye of a
design and dimension very close to that of the human eye.
Pausing to think about everything that has been said so far, we come to
this conclusion:
The sun radiates energy within a narrow band (a band so
narrow that it corresponds to just 1/1025 of the whole
electromagnetic spectrum) that has been carefully chosen.
So finely adjusted is this band that it keeps the world warm, supports
the biological functions of complex life-forms, enables photosynthesis,
and allows the creatures of this world to see.