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Optical depth
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=== Astronomy === {{Main article|Optical depth (astrophysics)}} In [[astronomy]], the [[photosphere]] of a star is defined as the surface where its optical depth is 2/3. This means that each photon emitted at the photosphere suffers an average of less than one scattering before it reaches the observer. At the temperature at optical depth 2/3, the energy emitted by the star (the original derivation is for the Sun) matches the observed total energy emitted.{{citation needed|date=November 2014}}{{clarify|reason=See talk page|date=April 2015}} Note that the optical depth of a given medium will be different for different colors ([[wavelength]]s) of light. For [[planetary rings]], the optical depth is the (negative logarithm of the) proportion of light blocked by the ring when it lies between the source and the observer. This is usually obtained by observation of stellar occultations. [[File:PIA22737-Mars-2018DustStorm-MCS-MRO-Animation-20181030.webm|thumb|center|600x600px|[[Atmosphere of Mars|Mars dust storm]] β optical depth tau β May to September 2018<br />([[Mars Climate Sounder]]; [[Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter]])<br />(1:38; animation; 30 October 2018; [[:File:PIA22737-Mars-2018DustStorm-MCS-MRO-Animation-20181030.webm|file description]])]]
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