pink
The sky on Mars is a butterscotch color during the day due to the planet's dust particles in the atmosphere. At sunset, the sky can turn a bluish hue. Due to Mars' thin atmosphere, the sky appears pinkish-red when viewed from the surface.
The sky on Mars looks pinkish grey from the Martian surface.
At the present time (late August 2009), in the northern Hemisphere, Mars is rising from the northeastern horizon around 1:00 AM,and climbing to the south-central sky by sunrise. During these hours, it can be easily identified, somewhere in the southeastern sky, as it is quite bright and quite red.
When Mars is in retrograde motion, it does not affect its brightness. Mars will continue to appear at its usual brightness in the night sky regardless of its retrograde motion. Retrograde motion refers to how the planet appears to move in the sky, not its actual brightness.
Mars is farther from the Sun than we are, so the Sun will appear to be smaller, not bigger. Mars is approximately 1.5 times the distance that we are from the Sun, so the Sun on Mars will only appear to be 44% the size as from Earth.
PINK!
it would be red
The sky is a pinkish-red when viewed from mars because the atmosphere causes a tint.The sky would be pink when viewed from Mars.
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.
The sky on mars is a pinky grey, the pink is a result of iron oxide (rust) suspended in the atmosphere
orangery red
Black because there is no atmosphere beyond your ankles on Mars.
The color of the sky on earth would still appear blue but the "sky" around you would be black
The sky on Mars is a butterscotch color during the day due to the planet's dust particles in the atmosphere. At sunset, the sky can turn a bluish hue. Due to Mars' thin atmosphere, the sky appears pinkish-red when viewed from the surface.
Mars's sky would be close to black, as there is no atmosphere that could add color.
The sky on Mars looks pinkish grey from the Martian surface.
At the present time (late August 2009), in the northern Hemisphere, Mars is rising from the northeastern horizon around 1:00 AM,and climbing to the south-central sky by sunrise. During these hours, it can be easily identified, somewhere in the southeastern sky, as it is quite bright and quite red.