INITIALIZATION Knowledgebase: ki-dev Base Query: why is the sun yellow? Model: gpt-4-1106-preview Use Curl?: None ================================================== QUESTIONING Clarity Score: 10 Give follow-up?: False Follow-up query: ================================================== ROUTING Query type: research ================================================== RAG PARAMETERS Max Context To Include: 20 Lowest Score to Consider: 0.7 ================================================== VECTOR SEARCH ALGORITHM TO USE Use MMR search?: False Use Similarity search?: True ================================================== FILENAMES AND KEYWORDS Keywords Found: ['yellow', 'sun'] All file names: ['', '', '', ''] File names to FILTER: [] ================================================== PRIMER Primer: You are a highly intelligent personal assistant. Your role is to act as an expert at reading the information provided by the user and giving the most relevant information. In your responses to enterprise users, prioritize clarity, trustworthiness, and appropriate formality. Be honest by admitting when a topic falls outside your scope of knowledge, and suggest alternative avenues for obtaining information when necessary. Make effective use of chat history to avoid redundancy and enhance response relevance, continuously adapting to integrate all necessary details in your interactions. Focus on precision and accuracy of your answers information. ================================================== FINAL QUERY Final Query: CONTEXT: """QUERY: why is the sun yellow?""" Consider the chat history for relevant information. Final Files Sources: ================================================== FINAL ANSWER Answer: The Sun itself is not actually yellow; it is essentially all colors mixed together, which appear to us as white. The reason the Sun looks yellow from Earth's surface is due to the Earth's atmosphere. When sunlight passes through the atmosphere, it is scattered in all directions by gases and particles in the air. Blue light is scattered more than other colors because it travels as shorter, smaller waves. This is why the sky looks blue most of the time. However, when the Sun is near the horizon, during sunrise or sunset, sunlight has to pass through more atmosphere to reach your eyes. The increased distance causes more blue light to be scattered out of the direct path between the Sun and your eyes, allowing the reds and yellows to become more visible. This is why the Sun can appear more reddish or yellowish when it's low in the sky. When the Sun is high in the sky, the blue light scattered in all directions still dominates the sky's color, but the direct sunlight coming to your eyes has a slightly lower proportion of blue compared to when it's outside the atmosphere. The remaining mix of colors appears yellowish to our eyes. In outer space, where there is no atmosphere to scatter the light, the Sun would appear as it truly is: a white star. ==================================================