mostly black
The Universe doesn't really have a color or more correctly it is without color. But if you need an answer it would be 99.9999999% black
(please note this is viewed from the inside. Whilst impossible to view from the outside at present, some current thinking believes that from the outside, it is in fact Ducks egg blue)
The same way you would see colour on Earth, by the reception of light waves by your eyes.
I was taught that we see color because our atmosphere refracts light much like a prism breaks out each color from visible light. Since there is no atmosphere in space I don't understand how we see color.
The main colour of space is black. Obviously, as its really dark out there. however, there are stars, the sun, and other bright objects that provide light. Otherwise, it would be seriously dark and you won't see anything!
In the Universe - every single colour.
Probably a lot more that our eyes cannot see.
Actually, there are infinitely many "colors," since there are infinitely many possible frequencies of light... even if we're only talking about visible light, because that's how real numbers work.
However, in practice, most vision scientists say humans can only distinguish about ten million distinct colors. This doesn't mean that anyone can actually name them all (thought I'd better get that in before someone asked for a list), instead it means that if you tried to pick more colors than that somewhere in the set of ten million would be one that could not be distinguished visually from the one you just picked.
Yes. However, in most parts of "space" there's nothing to see, or there's not enough light to see by. We live on a planet fairly close to a star, so we have plenty of light - but beyond the orbit of, say, Saturn, there wouldn't really be enough sunlight to see stuff. So we'd need to provide our own artificial light.
No color at all; so, black. Things have "color" because they either generate their own light, like a star, or reflect the light from something else. Outer space is pretty much empty; if there is nothing to reflect the light, then that blank spot will appear black.
Some astronomers claim the color of the universe is close to white. Their best guess White D65. See related links for a detailed analysis of the color of the universe.
Outer space has no colour, but overall I would call it black, if your looking for an answer however that's aside from the stars (balls of gas) you see there.
Of course. Things look normal, as long as they have appropriate light
shining on them. Just exactly the way things work down here.
Galaxies are made of many individual stars. They don't really have a definitive color; it depends on the proportion of star types within them.
when you see all of the colors when they combine it makes black
silver grey golden
You cannot see rainbows from space.
pink
No. All the colors that the eye can see are there, so there are no others to change to.
Yes - you can see all colors of the spectrum in Space.
red and yellow =)
A bar shaded with colors
You mean gamut? Gamut of colors represents all available colors in particular color space (like RGB, CMYK). When you see warning out of gamut that's mean that color can not be reproduced in color space in other words that color space can not handle that color or shade of color.
The colors that you see are the colors that are being reflected back at you
How dense is space? What is the chemical makeup of space? Is our Sun new or old? How big is space? How much does space weigh? Where is space? Is space always dark? Is there precipitation in space? Can sound travel in space? Are there UFO's in space, or just here on Earth? Are there colors in space? Is space three dimensional? Does the theory of relativity apply in space? How far away could you see a flashlight in space? Is space new or old? How old is space? What kind of things have come close to the Earth? (see Spaceweather.com asteroid encounters)
No
They can see all the colors we can.
Birds can see all the colors a human can see so name any color and a bird can see it
The colors give the body energy.. Most colors have various amount if light in them coming from a rod of invisible energy. The energy in these colors is what helps us ejaculate during mating occasions. nah im bsing
Red, Green, and Yellow. They can also see ultraviolet colors, or colors the human can't see
Lions can see the same colors as we can, but they can't see as far away as we can.