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Not very well. My little sister thinks so because those are her favorite colors. I guess it really just matters on your own opinion, but no. I think that sky blue does NOT go well with red.

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15y ago

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Why is the sky red today?

The sky appears red today due to the scattering of sunlight by particles and gases in the atmosphere, such as dust and pollution. This scattering causes shorter blue and green wavelengths to be dispersed, leaving longer red wavelengths to dominate the sky's color.


Why does earths sky appear blue and mars sky appear red?

Mars has a much thinner atmosphere than earth, it also has a constant haze of dust in the air that contains a brown iron oxide called limonite, which absorbs blue light and scatters the other wavelenghts of visible light.


Why is the sky and water blue?

The sky is blue because of Rayleigh scattering -- blue photons scatter off air molecules to a large extent, while the other colors travel directly in straight lines from the sun, making the sky appear blue and the sun appear yellow (white minus blue). In space, or on the airless moon, the sky is black and sun is white. It is NOT true that oceans look blue due to sky reflection. Water also scatters blue light, so the explanation of its color is largely the same as that for the sky.


Why does clear sky appear blue?

The Earth's atmosphere scatters sunlight in all directions, but shorter (blue) wavelengths are scattered more efficiently than longer (red) wavelengths. This scattering causes blue light to dominate our perception of the sky when it is clear.


Why is the sky blue while the grass is green?

The sky is blue because the atmosphere scatters sunlight. Light with shorter wavelengths (blue, purple, violet) is scattered more in the atmosphere, so the sky appears blue; this is the same reason that sunsets and sunrises appear red and orange: at sunset/sunrise, the sun's light hits the atmosphere at a low angle, increasing the distance that the light must travel through the atmosphere. Thus, more colors are 'scattered out', even the blue-end of the spectrum, leaving red and orange colors.