yes
Because it wants to!
The planet Earth as seen from outer space is a blue and white ball.
The Earth looks blue from space because of the water that covers most of it. Other colors that can be seen are green, brown and yellow.
No, the blue color of the Earth when seen from outer space is given by the atmosphere, not by the water on it.
Blue light is scattered more than other wavelengths by the gases in the atmosphere, giving the Earth a blue halo when seen from space
The earth, when seen from outer space, is blue, white, green, and brown. However, if you are talking about the soil earth, it can be pretty much any color.
That's because it looks mainly blue, from space. With the clouds it looks like a blue marble.The Earth is called the "blue planet" because the surface is composed mostly of water. Over 70 % of the Earth's surface is water.Water looks blue from space mainly because it reflects the blue atmosphere.However, the full explanation is quite complicated.(A clear sky in daylight looks blue from the Earth's surface, because of the way white light is scattered by the air molecules.)
have you not seen a photo of the earth taken from space? its just a haze around the earth.
well earth can be seen from space so when you go to space you can tell if a hurricane is forming
Blue.
Some people call the Earth a blue planet because when seen from near space (from the moon, for example) it appears primarily blue with white markings and a little brown. The blue comes from the fact that about 71% of the earth's surface is covered with water. However, the Earth does not have a nickname of "blue planet." That would require wider use that at present. Before the advent of color photographs from space, many people called Earth "the green planet" because their primary experience was of the green vegetation on the less that 25% of the plant's surface that has extensive vegetation.
The Great Barrier Reef.