it's because it just does
d wave length of violet colour is more than d wavelength of blue colour
Day markers are typically yellow or orange in color to provide clear visibility on the water during the day.
The sky is blue because air scatters blue light more than it scatters red light. So, when you look up at the sky (the sky, not the sun) you are looking at a portion of air. That air has scattered blue light so blue light is what enters your eyes.
Yes. The sun produces light across the entire visible spectrum. Its just that the yellow is most apparent. If the sun didn't produce blue light we wouldn't be able to see the color blue by sunlight..
The color of the sky varies depending on factors such as time of day and weather conditions. In general, the sky appears blue during the day due to the scattering of sunlight by the Earth's atmosphere. At sunrise and sunset, the sky can appear pink, orange, or red due to the scattering of shorter wavelengths of light.
d wave length of violet colour is more than d wavelength of blue colour
No. Doris Day's eyes are definitely blue.
No they only look like they do. The only look different in lighting changes. e.g. if the earths moon is risen during the day it may look blue
The sky looks blue during the day because of a phenomenon called Rayleigh scattering. This occurs when sunlight hits the Earth's atmosphere and scatters in all directions. Blue light has a shorter wavelength and scatters more easily than other colors, making the sky appear blue to our eyes.
Blue, yellow, white and black
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.
purple orange green yellow
Pay Day is not a Technical Machine in Pokemon Crystal, only in Red, Blue, or Yellow is it a TM. You must trade the Pokemon to Red, Blue, or Yellow to teach it Pay Day, as items cannot be held for those games.
red is "rojo" (ROH-hoh)blue is "azul" (ah-SOOL)green is "verde" (BAYR-day)and yellow is "amarillo" (AH-mah-REE-yoh)
no
According to RAYLEIGH scattering intensity is inversely proportional to the fourth power of wavelength so blue violet and indigo has shorter wavelength and more intensity when it gets scattered our eyes is sensitive to blue colour so sky appears blue to our eyes not violet or indigo
They are not bright enough to be seen when the atmosphere is illuminated by scattered sunlight, which makes the sky look blue, during the day.