blue i saw it in a telescope
The color of the sky depends on the position of the sun and its glare on the atmosphere. The clouds surrounding the sun and where you are on Earth also effects what color 'your' sky is. During sunset and sometimes sunrise, the sky is a pinkish color. During the day, it is usually cyan or light blue. The sky can also be gray, yellow, red, or purple. It is gray or black at nighttime.
The sky on Mars looks pinkish grey from the Martian surface.
Simple Answer:The Martian atmosphere is too thin to scatter blue light like the earth's so you can see the color of the pinkish-yellow dust in its air.Complete Answer:Around sunset and sunrise the Martian sky is pinkish-red in color, but in the vicinity of the setting sun or rising sun it is blue. This is the exact opposite of the situation on Earth. However, during the day the sky is a yellow-brown "butterscotch" color.The color of the skies of both Earth and Mars is due to the diffraction of sunlight by the atmosphere.On Earth, something called "Rayleigh scattering", explained in the next paragraph, makes the sky appear blue. On Mars, with its much thinner atmosphere, that effect is too subtle to see. Instead, you simply see the color created by the dust particles in the air. On earth, that Rayleigh scattering is so bright that it covers up the color of the dust always present in the air.But at sunset on Mars, the sunlight is going through much more atmosphere, making the Rayleigh effect visible, finally covering up the dust color and turning the sky around the sun blue.The Rayleigh effect that makes the blue on earth, or for a Martian sunset, works like this:The atmosphere diffuses more of the shorter wave lengths (the blue end of the spectrum) into the sky, while the longer wave lengths (red end of the spectrum) is not scattered enough and gets straight to our eyes as part of the image of the sun itself.On earth, like on Mars, during sunset the sunlight has to pass through much more air. But on Earth, the amount gets so extreme that the blue light is lost entirely, and the red light starts getting scattered.
Red. A more exact answer is "a yellowish brown"
No sky color necessarily means that a tornado will form. A yellow sky during or before a tornado is due to the fact that most tornadoes form in the late afternoon or early evening and often take place around sunset.
At sunrise, the sky on Mars is a somewhat red color. At sunset, there is a blue tint to the sky. For most of the day, the sky is a butterscotch color.
Mars' atmosphere always contains a lot of dust, and its sky is a Martian sky that is generally butterscotch in color, except for the pink or red of sunset.
Sunset, sunrise, the daytime and nighttime skies in Antarctica display every colour imaginable.
opal!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
the sky in the day's are usually Blue. if its any other color its usually not natural, for the sky to be green, white, or brown. yes it could be yellow, orange, purple, or pink because of a sunset.
The color of the sky depends on the position of the sun and its glare on the atmosphere. The clouds surrounding the sun and where you are on Earth also effects what color 'your' sky is. During sunset and sometimes sunrise, the sky is a pinkish color. During the day, it is usually cyan or light blue. The sky can also be gray, yellow, red, or purple. It is gray or black at nighttime.
The sky on Mars looks pinkish grey from the Martian surface.
the color of mars is orange.
Mars's sky would be close to black, as there is no atmosphere that could add color.
The sky on mars is a pinky grey, the pink is a result of iron oxide (rust) suspended in the atmosphere
Mars is very much like a rocky desert, it has black boulders and sand almost everywhere. Because of the dust in the air the sky looks reddish during the day but turns blue at sunrise and sunset.
Unicorn!