UVC
100 to 280 nm
What this ray does
UVC sits at the high-energy end of the ultraviolet spectrum, from 100 to 280 nm, with a DNA absorption peak near 260 nm IARC Monographs, NCBI NBK304366. In laboratory and industrial settings, that absorption profile is what makes UVC germicidal: at the right doses it inactivates microbial DNA. In sunlight at ground level, none of this matters. Stratospheric ozone absorbs essentially all the UVC the sun produces, so the sun-driven UVC dose on your skin is functionally zero IARC NBK304366; UKHSA UV radiation guidance, 2025. UVC is in this tool for completeness, and because the question of germicidal UV lamps tends to come up alongside any honest discussion of sunlight.
Evidence grade: Strong.
How deep it goes
Not applicable at ground level: stratospheric ozone removes essentially all sun-driven UVC before it reaches the skin, so depth into tissue is not meaningful for this band Finlayson et al. 2022; IARC NBK304366.
Can a supplement replicate this?
Not applicable: the biological effect at ground level is zero, so there is nothing to replicate.
Not applicable. No sunlight UVC effect at ground level.
What to watch for
From sunlight, nothing: UVC does not reach you. The UVC concern sits with industrial and germicidal lamp settings, where workplace eye and skin exposure rules apply. That is a separate conversation from sun exposure, and this tool covers sunlight only. For sun safety, the bands that matter are UVB and UVA on the next two cards.