The blue color of the sky seen from the Earth is due to the scattering of blue light by molecules in the atmosphere. At progressively higher altitudes, the blue color is less distinct, and in space does not occur at all. This phenomena is called Rayleigh Scattering or the Tyndall Effect.
A bit of background: The white light from the sun is a mixture of all colours of the spectrum. Each colour of light ahas a wavelengths. The visible part of the spectrum ranges from red light (wavelength =720 nm), to violet (wavelength =380 nm), with orange, yellow, green, blue and indigo between. The human eye reacts most strongly to strongly to red, green and blue wavelengths. This gives us colour vision.
The explanation: Light passing through a clear fluid with suspended particles is scattered. Some wavelengths like blue are scattered more strongly. The first person to notice this and experiment with it was John Tyndall in 1859, so it is called the Tyndall Effect. He made three important observations:
Some early researchers (Tyndall and Rayleigh) thought that the blue colour of the sky must be due to small particles of dust and droplets of water vapour in the sky. Later scientists discounted this and proposed that oxygen and nitrogen molecules are the cause of the scattering.
In 1911 Einstein did the math to prove that the molecules could cause the scattering. Technically the molecules scatter light because the electromagnetic field of the light waves induces electric dipole moments in the O2 and N2 molecules.
Space is not blue. Did you mean to ask, why is the sky blue?
-Denzel
-Bj
it is because during the day the sun shines on the oceans and the reflection of the ocean is viewed on the sky
Earth is blue because it is covered with water.
We are on the Earth's surface. To be in the Earth we would have to be underground. Although it doesn't look as if we are in space, the very thin blue sphere around Earth is our atmosphere. To enter space we would go through that atmosphere. :D
Because Earth is covered with water it looks blue. Mars is covered in red dust so it looks red.
a shiny blue thing in space
Images from space of Earth have been taken by NASA. When dark, Earth tends to be lit up. Natural and artificial gasses on Earth make it lit up at night. It can often seem like the stars, which we see in the sky at night are on Earth instead.
well you have the be in a space suit in all planets but earth and other air giveing planets so your neighbor wold look the same in a space suit
Earth is a deformed sphere. it has large dents all around it. from space you would see white, green, and mostly blue.
The blueness you see on the Earth from space is the oceanic water.
The Earth is blue because the O-zone layer is blue and creates the dominant color in the earth's atmosphere so that even from space the earth appears blue
Because it wants to!
because it reflects the light from the sun
because most of the earth's surface is covered by water, so from space it looks blue.
It's the water, and the green is land.
In space, the Earth looks like a blue marble. NASA has many photographs of the Earth from space. The earth is spherical like an orange but it is not orange.http://eol.jsc.nasa.gov/Collections/EarthFromSpace/land.htmhttp://www.wired.com/2014/12/digital-globe-best-earth-from-space-201
The 'sky' in space is an inky blackness. The sky as we know it is not seen from space as it is just the way light refracts in our atmosphere. Looking down at the earth from space, you cannot see the blue sky, only clouds, land and water. == ==
We are on the Earth's surface. To be in the Earth we would have to be underground. Although it doesn't look as if we are in space, the very thin blue sphere around Earth is our atmosphere. To enter space we would go through that atmosphere. :D
It is mostly water (blue) and the land is usually brown and/or green, except for places with mostly snow, which are white. Hope I helped!
The water appears blue because it is reflecting the sunlit atmosphere from the relative perspective of the surface of the Earth. (There are other reasons too.)